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ZIMBABWE:
Govt plans to import wheat to cover shortages
IRIN
News
March 15, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52233
JOHANNESBURG
- The Zimbabwean government plans to import wheat in May to meet
national consumption requirements, according to a senior official.
"We have produced about 133,000 mt of wheat, but it is not enough,"
said Didymus Mutasa, Minister of National Security, who chairs the
National Taskforce on Food Security. "We will have to import to
meet shortages, we will decide on the amount when we start planting
in May."
Millers have warned that the country has only a few weeks' supply
left. Agricultural experts pointed out that Zimbabwe has an annual
national wheat requirement of 420,000 mt, making an ample supply
of wheat critical because bread played an important role in the
national diet as a substitute for the staple maize-meal porridge.
Mutasa said there was no crisis and the country was "coping quite
well - despite the four years of drought and sanctions imposed on
us by European countries, we have gone through our most difficult
period yet".
The country has experienced food shortages over the last four years,
mainly due to erratic weather conditions, the impact of the chaotic
fast-track land reform programme on the agricultural sector and
a lack of foreign currency to import inputs, such as fuel and fertiliser.
The Millers Association of Zimbabwe reportedly said a shortage of
grain would force bakers to import flour from South Africa, which
could lead to further increases in bread prices. With inflation
at a record 782 percent, a loaf of bread currently costs 70 US cents,
putting it beyond the reach of most Zimbabweans, who earn average
monthly salaries of less than $100.
Agricultural analysts noted that Zimbabwe would also face a maize
shortfall of between 500,000 mt and 600,000 mt. Only an estimated
600,000 mt of maize was harvested last year, compared to a national
requirement of 1.8 million mt. Mutasa said the country had imported
181,000 mt of maize in 2005.
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