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"Overzealous"
police impound food aid
IRIN News
August 03, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=73578
Non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) distributing food aid are being forced to negotiate
with the Zimbabwean government after "sporadic" incidents
in which security forces impounded relief destined for drought-stricken
areas.
"So far,
incidents of the interception of food aid being distributed by NGOs
can be described as 'sporadic', and we will become more worried
if they become persistent," Cephas Zinhumwe, chief executive
officer of the National
Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (NANGO), told
IRIN.
"Individual NGOs
such as Care International and NANGO have been, and are still, engaged
in initiatives to rectify the issue with the government, to facilitate
the uninterrupted activities of relief agencies," he said.
Zinhumwe cited two recent
incidents in Masvingo Province, in the south, and the Rushinga district
of Mashonaland Central Province, in the north, where the police
intercepted relief shipments being transported by NGOs. The names
of the affected NGOs were not disclosed.
He said the police had
accused the NGOs of attempting to use relief consignments as a way
of influencing voters against President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF
government ahead of next year's presidential and parliamentary elections.
Mashonaland Central is
a ZANU-PF stronghold, where party militias regard strangers with
suspicion and police allegedly turn a blind eye to complaints of
harassment by party loyalists.
The police were overzealous
in impounding relief supplies, Zinhumwe said, "but we were
heartened by the intervention of the local members of parliament",
who, after being approached by NGOs for assistance, ensured that
the aid was released.
Zinhumwe said NANGO had
dispatched a monitoring team to observe the conditions NGOs were
working under, and were awaiting a report on whether other humanitarian
organisations had been constrained from operating freely.
"It would be wrong
to intercept food aid, considering that the country is currently
reeling under poverty and most areas that were affected by last
year's poor harvests are facing starvation," he said.
The Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) issued a joint
report on Zimbabwe's food security in June, in which they predicted
that "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 WFP assists about
300,000 people a month with food aid, and made an urgent appeal
on Wednesday for a further US$118 million to provide 3.3 million
people with food assistance from November 2007 to March 2008.
Food aid has been a contentious
issue in Zimbabwe for a number of years. The government has accused
humanitarian organisations of collaborating with local opposition
parties and of being the intermediaries of Western countries opposed
to ZANU-PF policies, particularly the former colonial power, Britain,
while NGOs and government critics have retorted that ZANU-PF has
used state-controlled food supplies as blackmail to extort votes
from the electorate.
Lovemore Matombo,
president of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), told IRIN, "It is immoral
for the government to force NGOs to be accountable to it when distributing
much-needed relief. The government is incapable of feeding its own
people, and what legitimate role does it have in presiding over
the work of professional NGOs?"
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