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Food
aid welcome, if crisis blamed on drought
IRIN News
May 31, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72488
The Zimbabwean
government has acknowledged it is facing a severe food crisis and
has welcomed food aid - so long as no "political strings"
are attached.
A joint Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) team was invited
to asses the food security situation in Zimbabwe late last month
after President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF government declared 2007
a drought year.
"I have received
a preliminary report from [WFP/FAO] which confirms our earlier fears
of food shortages. In their report they are saying the country will
this year harvest between 600,000 and 800,000 metric tonnes of grain,
which falls far short of the national requirement of about 2 million
metric tonnes. In my view, I think this is a fair assessment,"
agricultural minister, Rugare Gumbo, told IRIN.
Admitting international
assistance was required, he reiterated the government's position
that Zimbabwe would not accept "aid with political strings
attached".
Cees Wittebrood, head
of the European Commission's Humanitarian Aid Office (ECHO) for
Africa, Caribbean and Pacific, who visited Zimbabwe last week, said
the authorities needed to acknowledge the need for aid stemmed from
"man-made" causes. "Zimbabwe is facing a situation
where the agricultural policy is failing [and] overall governance
is not effective."
The WFP/FAO needs assessment
is due to be formally released next week.
Zimbabwe has experienced
severe food shortages over the past seven years due partly to recurrent
droughts, but mainly because of the government's chaotic land reforms
that have slashed foreign earnings.
"Zimbabwe has faced
droughts before but was very much capable of dealing with a drought
thanks to effective governance. They had the systems, water reservoirs,
irrigation, inputs, knowledge and technology to survive a period
without rain. But they don't have that any longer - because
the agricultural policy and their policy in general is failing -
the drought can give them [farmers] that last push over the edge,"
Wittebrood warned.
Addressing the aid issue
with the authorities was extremely sensitive: "The government
does not like to discuss humanitarian assistance because they recognise
it could be a testimony of a failing policy," he added.
In addressing Zimbabwe's
needs, Wittebrood said humanitarian agencies faced tough challenges,
including an inflation rate topping 3,700 percent and government
plans for strict registering of NGOs - the local parners of the
humanitarian community. Critics widely regard registration as intended
to dissuade NGOs from meddling in politics.
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