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Grain
supplies running low
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Benedict Unendoro (AR No. 126, 19-Aug-07)
August 19, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=337847&apc_state=henh
As food security in Zimbabwe
continues to deteriorate, a famine warning agency has classed the
situation there as an "emergency", while local millers
have warned that the country may soon run out of grain.
In a report
on August 9, the Famine
Early Warning System Network, FEWS NET, a United States agency
which monitors hunger worldwide - attributed the food crisis to
an ongoing economic decline made worse by a poor harvest, the government's
recent price controls and restrictions on basic commodity imports.
All these factors, the
report said, have "caused a significant decrease in Zimbabwe's
food security, especially in the southwest and in urban areas".
Speaking on condition
of anonymity, a miller based in Harare said, "We collect our
maize from the Grain Marketing Board depot at Murewa [a district
75 km northeast from the capital Harare] but there hasn't
been any maize there in the past few weeks. Our stocks are running
out very quickly."
He said the situation
was the same at Harare's main depot, Aspindale, where millers
from the rest of the country collect their consignments.
In a recent report, The
Herald, a government newspaper, revealed that the winter wheat harvest
this year was half the size of last year's, and that only
45,000 hectares instead of the projected 76,000 had been harvested.
In June
this year, FEWS NET warned that Zimbabwe faced a shortfall of
one million tonnes of maize, sorghum and millet - about 800,000
tonnes of it maize. It urged the government and donor community
to mobilise for an immediate and coordinated response to address
the growing levels of food shortages in the country.
"There is a general
consensus that Zimbabwe's 2006-2007 cereal production has
to be complemented by imports of over one million [tonnes] if the
country is to meet cereal requirements for the 2007/08 consumption
year."
According to FEWS NET,
Zimbabwe's domestic grain production meets only 55 per cent
of the country's needs.
The government's
grain monopoly, the Grain Marketing Board, GMB - which was established
to ensure food security, particularly in relation to staples such
as maize and wheat - has dismissed reports that the country is running
out of grain.
But its frantic efforts
to import supplies, particularly maize, suggest otherwise.
Last month, agriculture
minister Rugare Gumbo told the press that Zimbabwe was importing
200,000 tonnes of maize from Tanzania.
"We have been importing
maize from Zambia and Malawi. Right now, we are finalising the modalities
to import maize from Tanzania," he said.
But a proposed deal to
import 400,000 tonnes of maize from neighbouring Malawi was reportedly
delayed because of Zimbabwe's inability to pay.
In an interview this
week with the government paper The Herald, the GMB's acting
chief executive, Samuel Muvuti, said the maize expected from Malawi
was not rolling in due to "logistical problems in that country".
However, Malawi's
finance minister Goodall Gondwe, quoted in the Nyasa Times, suggested
that negotiations had focused on Zimbabwe's readiness to pay
for the maize.
"We've reached
an agreement and we are sure that they will pay us," he said.
According to FEWS NET,
115,000 tonnes of an expected 400,000 have so far been imported.
The agency also said the World Food Programme and C-SAFE, a consortium
of aid providers, are considering importing around 352,000 tonnes
of maize to make up the shortfall.
But the agency has now
raised doubts about whether the GMB has the capacity to distribute
the grain even if enough is imported. "The GMB's ability
to distribute maize is a serious concern, as in the past GMB distributions
have been erratic and local shortages are common," said the
latest FEWS NET report.
There is also concern
that the GMB is vulnerable to political manipulation by the ruling
ZANU-PF party, which has an interest in seeing that grain goes to
areas seen as loyalist rather than opposition constituencies.
While the Zimbabwe government
blames crop shortages on the droughts that have ravaged the country
in the past few years, its critics say the government's controversial
agricultural policies are the cause.
In particular, they point
to the controversial land reform programme, which the government
launched in 2000 to confiscate land from white commercial farmers
and redistribute it to poor and middle-income landless black Zimbabweans.
Much of the land went to farmers with no experience of large-scale
farming, and some went to senior regime figures who had no interest
in turning the farms round.
Government critics say
that like all tropical countries, Zimbabwe is naturally prone to
drought, but the commercial farmers had mitigated the effects by
installing modern irrigation systems, which were then vandalised
and neglected during the chaotic land grab.
The GMB told the Cabinet
Taskforce on Pricing on August 7 that besides the lack of maize,
its work had been greatly affected by a June government directive
to slash prices of goods and services in an attempt to counter soaring
inflation.
In response, the taskforce
told the GMB and millers to comply with the regulations or face
prosecution, and warned that a law would soon be enacted to impose
mandatory two-year jail terms for traders found guilty of over-pricing.
Although millers agreed
to comply with the directive, they said the pricing formula was
not sustainable and would only make the food situation worse.
By the time they have
bought maize from the GMB, transported it to their mills, paid their
workers, and taken care of other overheads including packaging,
they say they make a profit of just 2,000 Zimbabwean dollars, ZWD
- roughly 13 US cents - on each 10 kilogram bag.
"They say we should
sell a 10 kg bag of maize meal for 37 ZWD when it costs us 35,000
ZWD to produce it," said a miller who spoke on condition of
anonymity. "It simply won't do."
Benedict Unendoro is
an IWPR contributer in Harare
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