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Zimbabwe,
WFP sign deal to distribute food aid
Peta
Thornycroft, VOA News
December 01, 2005
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-12-01-voa37.cfm
After weeks
of difficult negotiations, the U.N.World Food Program has signed
an agreement with the Zimbabwe government for an emergency program
to feed up to four million people. The United Nations won its demand
that all food distribution be done by non-governmental organizations
and not the Zimbabwe government.
The World Food
Program said it fed two million people in November although the
agreement was only signed Thursday.
The Zimbabwe
government said last year it had grown record crops and asked the
WFP to stop feeding people ahead of the general election this past
March. Human rights groups protested that food was used as a political
weapon during the run up to the poll.
For the fifth
year in a row, ever since President Robert Mugabe instituted a policy
of seizing white-owned commercial farms, Zimbabwe's crops have failed.
The economy, which depended for decades on agriculture produced
by the seized farms, has been bankrupted. Zimbabwe had been self
sufficient in food production and its export crops provided 40 percent
of annual foreign exchange earnings.
Economists say
that such products as seed, fertilizer, fuel and equipment, were
largely unavailable because of foreign currency shortages in last
growing season. In addition, rainfall was patchy, and in some areas,
there was a drought.
The WFP had
been pressing to resume its emergency feeding program for several
months. Mr. Mugabe had said he would not allow non-governmental
organizations to distribute food because they have a political agenda.
The WFP, backed
by strong calls from Secretary General Kofi Annan, insisted NGOs
would distribute the food and its determination has prevailed.
The WFP said
its non-governmental partners were preparing to feed more than three
million people, as well as an additional million who are already
being fed through programs for targeted groups, such as orphans,
school children and people living with HIV/AIDS.
WFP regional
spokesman Michael Huggins in Johannesburg said the deal only covered
food aid to rural areas and that many more people would benefit
from emergency feeding in urban areas. He said this could not be
done until the Zimbabwe government recognized that there was a need
for assistance in these areas.
Most opposition
supporters live in urban areas.
Mr. Huggins
said the WFP was concerned about urban dwellers who lost their incomes
during the government's demolition of hundreds of thousands of urban
homes and a crackdown on informal traders last May and June.
Agricultural
sources across the country say that the 2006 farming season will
be the worst ever. December first is the last day for maize plantings
for fair yields according to the Commercial Farmers Union.
Less maize has
been planted this summer season than at any time in the last 50
years according to farmers' organizations. The present agreement
with the WFP runs until June next year.
Emergency food
is largely funded by donations from the United States, the European
Union and Britain.
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