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Government
allows food donor organisations to review its food security
IRIN News
April
24, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=71808
BULAWAYO - Officials
from the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and the World
Food Programme (WFP), at the invitation of Zimbabwean government,
are scheduled to arrive in the country this week to assess the food
security situation.
President Robert
Mugabe's ZANU-PF government has already warned that it will not
accept any food aid with "political strings attached", although
a second successive year of drought and major disruptions in the
farming sector in recent years have resulted in the country producing
less than one-third of its annual food requirements this year.
"Government
will certainly sit down and decide which aid agencies or organisations
to allow assisting with food distribution. We realise that there
are organisations bent on using aid as a political tool to enhance
the interests of the [political] opposition, and we are not going
to allow that," agriculture minister Rugare Gumbo told IRIN.
"We are going
through a severe drought and we realise the need to step up food
imports, but we first of all have to get an independent assessment
of the situation; that is why we have invited WFP and FAO," he said.
The FAO's Food
Emergency Officer, Kisan Kunjal, told the media this week that the
food assessment visit would determine which parts of the country
required aid, and how much assistance was needed. A FAO-WFP joint
food assessment team was kicked out of the country in 2004 after
the government accused it of propagating false data about the country's
food security.
Last month Gumbo
told IRIN that although government had declared 2007 a drought year,
it was not going to accept any food aid, but would rely on imports
from neighbouring countries such as Malawi and South Africa to cover
the more than one million tonne maize shortfall.
However, Zimbabwe's
economic meltdown, which has seen official inflation rates of around
1,700 percent, and unofficial estimates of over 2,000 percent, has
made foreign exchange a rarity.
The government's
own food security assessment revealed that 563,000mt of maize would
be harvested this year, against the country's annual requirement
of about 1.8mt million of the staple food.
Gumbo said the
government had already imported "a substantial amount" of food from
Malawi, and that further efforts were being made to secure imports
from other neighbouring countries.
Importing maize
is set against a regional shortage of the staple food, according
to this month's ABSA Bank Economic Monitor. The bank's April report
said "maize production may be well below expectations ... Maize
prices in response to the lower rainfall have risen to over R2000/tonne
(US$285 per tonne) in early March, before easing to around R1,752
(US$249) [per tonne] by April."
Renson Gasela,
agricultural secretary for the opposition party, the Movement for
Democratic Change, welcomed the planned visit of the FAO-WFP delegation,
saying it would provide a clear picture of the extent of food shortages
in the country. "Government has already declared this year a year
of drought, and promised food imports, but it may turn out that
the food needed is way beyond its pocket, since there is no foreign
currency in the country."
Zimbabwe has
experienced seven years of severe food shortages, blamed on a combination
of the government's fast track-land reform policy, which saw white
commercial farmland redistributed to landless blacks, and drought.
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