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Govt
declares drought, but says no to food aid
IRIN
News
March 21, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=70845
BULAWAYO - The Zimbabwean government
has officially declared 2007 a drought year, but insisted it would
not ask for food assistance because it has the capacity to feed
its own people.
Agricultural minister Rugare Gumbo
told IRIN the government had issued the declaration
after a countrywide food assessment revealed that most provinces
had been severely affected by a ravaging dry spell that had wilted
crops, especially maize, Zimbabwe's staple food.
"Crops have dried up due to moisture
stress and, as government, we saw it fit to declare this year a
year of drought after an assessment showed that most parts of the
country had been affected," said Gumbo. "Most provinces need food,
but this will be done by government through its drought-relief programmes,
coordinated by committees. We have the capacity and won't need outside
help."
Last week, the official newspaper,
The Herald, reported that the government would be importing 400,000
metric tonnes of maize, mainly from South Africa, to cover a possible
shortfall that might arise after this season's harvest.
The most affected provinces, according
to Gumbo, were Matabeleland South, Matabeleland North, Midlands
and Masvingo, all in southern Zimbabwe, and Manicaland
in the west.
Traditional leaders and legislators,
including those from the ruling ZANU-PF party, urged government
last week to put urgent drought relief measures in place, as some
areas were already in need of food supplies.
Angeline Masuku, governor of Matabeleland
South and a top official of the ruling
party, who has been outspoken about
the food crisis in her province, told IRIN that any delay in food
aid could have grave consequences for many households.
"Southern Zimbabwe is naturally dry
and because rains have been scarce this year, the drought that we
are witnessing is unparalleled. There have been droughts in the
past six to seven years, but the one we are witnessing this year
looks more severe," she said.
"We have asked government to step up
food distribution and hand over grain to families. The food will
not necessarily be free to everybody, as the middle aged and able
bodied will be asked to do some work before they can receive anything
... government has therefore promised to intervene urgently," Masuku
said.
In rural Matobo, a drought-prone district
in southern Zimbabwe, state-procured maize is available at the state-owned
Grain Marketing Board (GMB) outlets, at the highly subsidised price
of US$2.70 for a 50kg bag. The current informal market exchange
rate is Zim$18,000 to US$1.
But, despite the low cost, villagers
like Ellen Sibanda cannot afford the maize, and said they needed
free aid. "We are just finishing the fresh mealie [maize] cobs that
we planted in our tiny fields, and in a week's time or so we will
be grounded. There won't be anything for us to eat." About 83 percent
of Zimbabwe's population lives on less than US$2 a day.
Communal farmers pointed out that maize
was often not available at the GMB outlets. "Even when it is there,
some of us cannot afford it. We don't have the money, and what we
need is free food aid, like what we used to get from World Vision
and World Food Programme (WFP)," said one.
The government called a halt to general
feeding programmes run by humanitarian agencies and their nongovernmental
organisation partners in 2004, saying the country was expecting
a bumper harvest. Since then, aid agencies have downscaled their
operations to target vulnerable groups, such as people living with
HIV/AIDS and the elderly.
WFP is currently providing food assistance
to 1.5 million beneficiaries through various feeding programmes
for vulnerable groups.
"There is absolutely nothing in the
fields here [in Matabeleland South]. People are already going hungry
because the crops did not do well. We do selective distribution
in compliance with government policy, but what looks apparent is
that, ultimately, wholesale food distribution will be needed," an
aid worker commented.
As the country endures its seventh
successive year of drought, Zimbabweans are battling with shortages
of food, foreign currency and fuel, on top of an annual inflation
of more than 1,700 percent.
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