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More
than a third of Zimbabweans require food assistance
IRIN News
June 05, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72566
Zimbabwe's poor
harvest "due to adverse weather conditions" and an economy
wracked by hyperinflation will leave more than a third of the population
requiring food assistance by early next year, a joint report released
on Tuesday by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and
the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said.
Crop failures in the
southern provinces and the rapid erosion of incomes caused by Zimbabwe's
annual inflation rate of 3,714 percent - the world's highest - has
escalated poverty in both rural and urban areas. The report said
about "2.1 million people will face serious food shortages
as early as the third quarter of 2007. The number of people at risk
will peak at 4.1 million in the first three months of 2008 -
more than a third of Zimbabwe's estimated population of 11.8 million."
The actual percentage
of Zimbabweans requiring food assistance could in reality be much
higher, as millions of migrants are believed to have crossed into
neighbouring countries such as South Africa and Botswana, or further
a field to the United States and Europe, in search of work. Some
estimates have put the exodus of Zimbabweans at about four million,
or more than a third of the population. Zimbabwe has an unemployment
rate of about 80 percent.
Richard Lee, the WFP's
regional information officer based in Johannesburg, said he was
aware of the reports about large-scale migration of people from
Zimbabwe, but the report "had to concern itself" with
the official figures gleaned from population growth data based on
the country's 2002 census.
The joint mission, which
visited Zimbabwe from 25 April to the 18 May, said in their crop
and food supply assessment report that about 352,000 metric tonnes
(mt)of cereals and 90,000mt of other food assistance would be required
to meet the country's basic food needs.
"While
drought devastated crops in many areas, Zimbabwe's overall production
was also hampered by insufficient fertilizer, fuel and tractors
and by the country's crumbling irrigation system," Henri Josserand,
chief of FAO's Global Information and Early Warning System, said.
"Most importantly, uneconomic prices set by the government
have discouraged many farmers from producing surplus cereals for
sale."
The report said this
year's April/May harvest had declined by 44 percent from last year's
official estimate and put the crop estimate at "925,000mt of
cereals, including 799,000mt of maize and 126,000mt of sorghum and
millet."
"Zimbabwe's looming
food crisis is the result of another poor harvest, exacerbated by
the country's unprecedented economic decline, extremely high unemployment,
and the impact of HIV/AIDS," Amir Abdulla, WFP's Regional Director
for Southern Africa, said. According to UNAIDS 20.1 percent of Zimbabweans
between the ages of 15 and 49 years old are infected with HIV/AIDS.
"Hyperinflation,
currently over 3,700 percent per annum, and the ever plummeting
Zimbabwe dollar have drastically reduced people's purchasing power,
greatly limiting access to available food supplies for low and middle
income people, particularly in urban areas," Kisan Gunjal,
Joint CFSAM Mission Leader, said.
The report gave
the "shocking" example of the effects of hyperinflation
on the salary of a teacher, who earn US$10 a month, "when [the]
transport cost to work alone can be a significant part of that [the
salary]."
Worst
affected areas
The report's
initial estimates were that about one million people in urban areas
would face food shortages over the coming months and could require
food assistance.
The worst-affected provinces
were Matabeleland South, Matabeleland North, and Midlands, where
many families had harvested nothing and could run out of food as
early as next month. The cereal harvest in Manicaland and Masvingo
was also about half of last year's output.
The report said that
"taking into consideration the forthcoming October wheat crop
and current stocks ... domestic cereal availability is around 1.29
million tonnes against a total national utilization of 2.34 million
tonnes - leaving over a million tonnes to be imported."
The report said the government,
which is suffering from a chronic shortage of foreign currency,
had already contracted for 400,000mt of maize from Malawi and was
expected to import a further 239,000mt of wheat and rice. It also
estimated that "61,000 tonnes of maize could to be brought
into the country through informal cross-border trade and in-kind
remittances, especially from South Africa - leaving a gap
of 352,000mt of cereals to be met by food aid."
It was acknowledged in
the report that the government's fast track land reform programme
launched in 2000, that redistributed commercial farmland owned by
white farmers to landless blacks, had "severely disrupted farming
activities as many resettled farmers lack access to capital and
other inputs."
The joint report recommended
that next year's harvest and national food supply would improve
if there was "an adequate and timely supply to farmers of good
quality seeds and fertilizer ahead of the next cropping season"
and urged "the international community to work jointly on improving
food security by investing in farm mechanization and infrastructure."
Lee said donor funding
had not yet been secured, but since 2002 when food assistance began
in Zimbabwe, "the international community had been very generous."
He said the only concern was funds were required "urgently."
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