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Urgency
needed to avert a humanitarian crisis
IRIN News
July 23, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73376
HARARE, 23 July 2007
(IRIN) - An urgent call on Zimbabwe's ZANU-PF government and the
international donor community to mobilise food aid to avert an impending
crisis has been met with assurances by government that "no
one will starve".
"There
is a general consensus that Zimbabwe's 2006/07 cereal production
has to be complemented by imports of over one million mt [metric
tonnes] if the country is to meet cereal requirements for the 2007/08
consumption year," said the latest
overview of sub-Saharan food security by Famine Early Warning
Systems (FEWS NET) for June.
"The government
and donor community need to mobilise for an immediate and coordinated
response to address the growing levels of [food] insecurity in the
country," said the US-based FEWS NET, which provides food security
information on 17 countries in the region.
Zimbabwe's agriculture
minister, Rugare Gumbo, admitted in June that the country was facing
a food crisis after a growing season marred by drought and widespread
shortages of inputs, and that maize production of between 600,00mt
and 800,000mt "falls far short of the national requirement
of about two million mt".
After publication of
the FEWS NET report, the deputy minister of information, Bright
Matonga, told the official daily newspaper, The Herald, that "no
one will starve".
The Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP) recently conducted
a joint assessment of food security and found that Zimbabwe had
produced around 1,055,000mt of cereals, around 300,000mt more than
government estimates.
The assessment said more
than a third of the population would require food aid by early 2008,
and the country would have to import a total of 1,052,000mt of cereals:
813,000mt of maize, and the remainder as sorghum, wheat and millet.
To partially bridge the
gap, the government has bought 400,000mt of maize from Malawi, of
which 70,000mt had been imported by June, according to FEWS NET.
The current winter wheat-growing
season started poorly as a result of inadequate fuel, fertiliser,
equipment and expertise, while an unreliable electricity supply
has hampered irrigation.
Food insecurity
was worsening, the report said, particularly in the southwestern
parts of the country, which traditionally experienced arid conditions.
Here households were "already running out of food stocks from
their current harvests", a situation that was being compounded
by the unreliability of other sources of cereals, like the Grain
Marketing Board (GMB), the government's official buyer.
Inflation
The hyperinflationary
environment - over 4,000 percent annually - has led to a steep rise
in grain prices, making it difficult for consumers to access staple
foods such as maize, FEWS NET said.
The report cited Chimanimani
and Nyanga in Manicaland Province, the southern districts of Masvingo
Province, as well as Hwange and Nkayi in Matebeleland North Province
as having been particularly affected by rocketing prices.
"The annual rate
of inflation has continuously increased, and most households have
not been able to meet their minimum food requirements and non-food
requirements, and instead have cut back on expenses for education,
transport and medical services," FEWS NET commented.
"Soon after harvests,
most households are already out of own production stocks,"
and have consumed what was already often a diminished or poor crop.
Around 80 percent
of the country's 12 million people live below the poverty datum
line, with the Consumer
Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) saying an average family of six needed
Z$5.5 million (US$22 at the parallel market rate of Z$250,000 to
US$1) to sustain themselves in May.
The government imposed
stringent price controls after daily increases in the prices of
commodities and other services by business attempting to cushion
itself against the effects of inflation.
Scores of businesspeople
were jailed for not complying with government's edict and many formal-sector
firms heeded the instructions, but others have scaled down their
operations or stopped production, resulting in an acute shortage
of food items and a growing reliance on sourcing food from the parallel
market, where goods are available but at much higher prices.
Rural
areas
During a recent trip
to Mhondoro, a district in Mashonaland West Province, an IRIN correspondent
found many rural households severely affected by food shortages.
"Our harvests were
poor and, as a result, we were depending on shops and the owners
of grinding mills for maize, but after the crackdown on shops, grain
is no longer available," a villager, who declined to be identified,
told IRIN.
"When sugar is available,
we have tea and sweet potatoes in mid-morning, and then sadza (thick
maizemeal porridge, a staple dish) and vegetables grown in our gardens
in the evenings," she said.
"But since maize
is hard to come buy, we are now mostly surviving on maheu (a mildly
alcoholic home brew made of maizemeal) and the sweet potatoes, which
could run out at any time."
She said the local GMB
depot was not providing them with maize because it wanted to build
up reserves, and farmers who had managed to produce surpluses were
not selling to the GMB because of delayed payments. Instead, they
sold directly to the informal market, where cash was paid immediately,
or they smuggled their harvest to neighbouring countries to sell
it for a more stable currency.
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