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UN:
1,4m people in Zim will need food aid
Stella
Mapenzauswa, Reuters
October 11, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/&articleid=286405
About 1,4-million people in Zimbabwe
will need food aid in the six months until the next summer harvest
despite improved output from last season, a United Nations World
Food Programme official said on Wednesday.
President Robert Mugabe's government
has forecast production of 1,8-million tonnes of the staple maize
grain for the 2005/06 season.
But food agencies, while acknowledging
output has improved in recent years, predict a lower crop as the
Southern African country struggles to recover from a sharp downturn
in agriculture widely blamed on controversial land reforms.
On Wednesday, the WFP's Zimbabwe representative,
Kevin Farrell, said a joint exercise involving the government, UN
agencies and non-governmental organisations had found that over
a 10th of the country's estimated 12-million people would require
aid before next April.
"We would broadly agree with that [assessment
that] about 1,4-million people are in need of some level of food
assistance," Farrell said at a news conference in Harare.
"The [food aid] distribution requirements
between now and end of March are roughly 65 000 tonnes ... I would
guess that has a cost of about $35-million. Of that, we have a shortfall
as of today of 26 000 tonnes or $16-million."
On Wednesday, Sweden donated $500 000
towards the WFP operations in Zimbabwe, under which over five million
people have received aid since 2002.
"The social and economic situation
in Zimbabwe remains very difficult and food aid to the poorest groups
of the population will continue to be a priority," said ambassador
Sten Rylander.
Critics say disruptions to agriculture
linked to Mugabe's controversial seizure of white-owned farms for
blacks largely ill-equipped to fully utilise the land have left
what was once Southern Africa's breadbasket struggling to feed itself.
Sweden is a member of the European
Union, which has clashed with Mugabe's government over the land
seizures as well as charges that it has abused human rights and
rigged elections since 2000 to stay in power.
Asked on Wednesday whether the Swedish
aid did not constitute propping up Mugabe's government amid an economic
crisis widely blamed on its misrule, Rylander said it was part of
humanitarian efforts to resolve the country's problems.
"I will never give up these efforts.
I think there are a number of people in the government we can work
with ... to move Zimbabwe out of the present situation," he said.
Last month the government said Zimbabwe's
defence forces had taken over food security to shore up falling
production as farmers hamstrung by shortages of inputs such as fuel,
seed and fertiliser and a lack of skills struggle to raise output.
-- Reuters
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