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Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe runs out of staple food
VOA
News
July 27, 2007
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-07-27-voa26.cfm
There has been no maize
meal in Zimbabwe's second city Bulawayo, in Matabeleland in the
south of the country, for the last week either in supermarkets or
on the usually robust black market. The population depends on cooked
maize meal as its main staple. Bulawayo, an opposition stronghold
in a dry part of southern Zimbabwe, suffered from lack of rain last
summer resulting in the failure of its maize crop. This means there
is no maize available from farmers around Bulawayo and the city
then has to depend on supplies from the capital Harare. There is
only one legal grain trader in Zimbabwe, the government's Grain
Marketing Board. Since Zimbabwe's agricultural sector failed following
seizures of productive white-owned farms in 2000, Zimbabwe has had
to import maize and depend on emergency food aid from the United
Nations and other humanitarian agencies. In other parts of Zimbabwe,
especially in the north, some subsistence farmers did have decent
rain and crops, and some of that is being sold unofficially, on
the black market.
David Coltart is an opposition
member of parliament for the Movement for Democratic Change representing
a poor urban constituency in Bulawayo. "From my personal experience
trying to source mealie meal, my wife and I have been trying to
source mealie meal for the last two days and have gone to a wide
variety of supermarkets around town," he said. "We have
also approached wholesalers for this staple and it is simply unavailable.
I have been in to my own constituency every day in the last week,
and I have seen no evidence of any international or domestic NGOs
distributing food for the needy. I have also been to the homes of
disadvantaged people in the last week, and it is clear to me we
are at the point where people on the margins are starving."
In a rural area in the
south, another MDC MP, Abdenico Bhebe, said people in his district
were dying in record numbers. "What I see every day - we are
seeing a lot of deaths, especially the young and old, and I believe
that it has been exacerbated by the shortage of food. Yes the middle
age, there is the issue of HIV, which [has] actually been worsened
by the lack of food. So we are seeing a pathetic situation. So in
every homestead, there are one or two funerals every day. There
is no maize, no mealie meal in Nkayi at the moment. There are wild
fruits and some watermelons, but they have dried up." Traditionally,
relief agencies stop supplying food to people under threat of starvation
from the onset of the maize harvest, usually May until September.
There was no harvest in the south. "We know the situation in
the south is particularly bad, but believe me it is bad in lots
of places. And I am not sure we have the right numbers of people
who will need food aid before the next harvest in 2008," said
an executive of a relief agency in Harare who did not want to be
named.
The World Food Program,
WFP, estimated that about 4.1 million Zimbabweans, or more than
a third of the population will need emergency food aid before next
harvest. Zimbabwe is currently importing maize from Malawi, but
none is available to millers in Bulawayo. Coltart says the sudden
shortage of maize in Bulawayo should not have been a surprise to
the government. "I think the government has known for some
time that there would be shortages, but I am not sure this catastrophe
applies countrywide," Coltart noted, "as subsistence farmers
in the north and east, where they had good rain will have some maize
- but the situation is very dire in the south. I don't know what
government is doing about it, but they have certainly been derelict."
The UN has warned that it does not have enough money to provide
emergency food aid for Zimbabweans until the next harvest in May
2008.
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