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ZIMBABWE:
Govt bans unofficial crop estimates
IRIN
News
April 12, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52794
JOHANNESBURG
- As uncertainty persists over the extent of Zimbabwe's food deficit
this season, the government has warned external agencies against
carrying out crop assessments.
Agriculture minister Joseph Made was reported by state media as
saying: "We have information that some multilateral organisations
are holding crop assessment meetings in the rural areas without
government permission. We wish to make it clear that this is totally
illegal, and any rural communities found giving such information
will be dealt with severely."
Made also suspended the release of periodic crop assessments by
his own ministry, reportedly on the grounds they were largely speculative,
and said the only legitimate surveys would be those carried out
by a special government committee headed by the Central Statistics
Office (CSO).
However, it was unclear to which multilateral agencies allegedly
making crop assessments Made was referring. The last two published
independent surveys were conducted by the US-funded Famine Early
Warning Network and the US Department of Agriculture. Both forecast
deficits, with maize production estimated at between 700,000 mt
and 900,000 mt respectively, compared to a domestic demand of 1.4
million mt.
"These people are in the rural areas, in all sorts of guises. Crop
assessment is the business of the CSO. Anyone who does it outside
the confines of that organisation is breaking the law and shall
be dealt with," Made told IRIN.
The government has, however, invited the UN's Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO) to participate in a joint crop and food supply
assessment mission. FAO was prevented from carrying out similar
surveys in 2004 and 2005.
Edward Mkhosi, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
shadow minister for agriculture, accused the government of trying
to hide the extent of the country's food crisis, which he blamed
on the authorities' failure to provide enough fertiliser and seeds
to take advantage of the good rains.
"Independent assessments will not produce cook-ups - that is why
government wants them out," he told IRIN. "The simple fact that
there is no bumper harvest in Zimbabwe, that much is not a secret
anymore."
According to Mkhosi, "The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe released most
of the agriculture support funds in January, three months into the
farming season. It was too late for anyone to do anything." Fuel
shortages and lack of spare parts had also halted tractors, affecting
tillage capacity, he noted.
Made refused to say whether the country was still expecting a bumper
harvest, as predicted earlier.
"The national crop assessment has not been done, so I cannot say
anything about harvest expectations," said Made. "In terms of government-to-farmer
support, there were indeed many inadequacies, but why should farmers
expect government to give them everything? We only provide to the
needy, not everyone. They should learn to work hard on their own."
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