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Africa
faces better food year but crises remain
Peter
Apps, Relief Web
June 22, 2007
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/SHES-74EMVU?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe
LONDON, (Reuters) - Most
of Africa has seen better rains and better harvests than in recent
years, aid workers say, but they fear a looming crisis in Somalia
while drought and HIV are slashing crop output in parts of southern
Africa.
Last year saw a serious
drought in East Africa, while 2005 saw a food crisis in Niger that
grabbed worldwide headlines. Experts say 2007 looks easier but four
countries -- Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Lesotho and Somalia -- are cause
for concern.
At the same time, aid
agencies are trying to address underlying chronic long-term malnutrition
problems and agricultural failure and help those who have still
not recovered from previous years.
"Because of the
lull in east and west Africa, aid agencies are trying to address
the underlying problems," United Nations World Food Programme
(WFP) spokesman Peter Smerden said from Nairobi.
"In east Africa,
what you have is pastoralists and herders who lost all their livestock
in 2006 and have not yet recovered. They still need aid."
But while rains look
good in the areas hit by last year's drought in the east and while
West Africa's Sahel region has enjoyed two years of good harvests,
parts of southern Africa have had their worst growing season in
decades.
Some frequent hunger
blackspots such as Malawi and Zambia have enjoyed bumper crops --
even exporting to regional breadbasket South Africa -- but the mountain
kingdoms of Lesotho and Swaziland face a tough year.
Swaziland has recorded
its worst harvest ever and the United Nations says 400,000 people
there will need some 40,000 tonnes of food. On top of drought, the
country has the world's highest HIV infection rate of almost 43
percent.
National cereal production
in Lesotho is estimated at just 72,000 tonnes against the national
requirement of 360,000.
Twenty percent less land
was planted with cereals as agricultural workers died from AIDS.
Violence and chaos
HIV and drought have
hit Zimbabwe, where economic collapse and hyper-inflation make it
hard for families to get by. The state newspaper says maize output
this year was only 500,000 tonnes against 1.8 million the previous
year.
Aid agencies were already
sceptical about the previous year's 1.8 million figure, saying a
shortage of seed, fertiliser and other essentials hit the crop.
Zimbabwe has suffered serious food shortages since 2001, and while
the government blames drought, critics blame the seizure of white-owned
farms.
Aid groups repeatedly
have clashed with President Robert Mugabe's government and say it
is too soon to say how much access they will be allowed.
Aid agencies in southern
Africa normally buy large quantities of food aid from South Africa,
but a lower harvest than normal has pushed up prices.
Some aid workers worry about access to Somalia, where the government
is seen as reluctant to allow food shipments to insurgent areas.
Even without that, delivering aid in one of the world's most lawless
countries is challenging.
Hundreds of thousands
of people have fled fighting in the capital Mogadishu, although
some have since returned. Rains in parts of the country have failed.
"There are forecasts
that make quite grim reading," WFP's Smerden said. "There
may be a crop failure in central and southern Somalia."
WFP has lost several
sea cargoes into Somalia to increasingly sophisticated pirate attacks,
and warns that more could make shipments impossible.
Security problems also
hamper delivery for the world's largest humanitarian operation in
Darfur, where around 13,000 aid workers are trying to help around
4 million people affected by conflict.
Aid agency Oxfam shut
down operations this month in Darfur's largest camp after a string
of incidents, although the Red Cross took on much of their work.
"Because most people
are displaced anyway, they are not growing a lot of food so it is
a matter of keeping the supply lines open," Smerden said. "Every
month there are pockets we can't reach... but we are reaching most
people."
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