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Australia
to provide more food aid to Zimbabwe
Alexander Downer, Australian Minister for Foreign
Affairs
August 28, 2007
Australia will provide
a further $3.5 million to help the World Food Programme (WFP) feed
about three million people in Zimbabwe.
This funding, through
the Government's Australian Fund for Zimbabwe, will support
food distribution to people most in need, such as HIV/AIDS orphans
and the chronically ill, and to households in areas of acute food
shortages.
Many Zimbabweans have
fled the country as the policies of the Mugabe regime have ravaged
food production and made living conditions increasingly difficult.
While estimates vary, it is likely that at least three million people
have left since the prolonged economic crisis started in the late
1990s.
Of the remaining population,
a growing number face severe deprivation, with up to 80 per cent
of the country's 12 million people now living below the poverty
datum line. Along with drought in some areas, hyper-inflation has
seen a sharp rise in grain prices. Hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans
are already starting to run out of food. The need for further humanitarian
assistance is urgent.
Australia's funding
will also help enhance WFP's monitoring and reporting of food
distribution programs. The WFP provides food aid strictly according
to need, without regard to political or other affiliation. In contrast,
the Mugabe regime has used food distribution through government-controlled
channels for political purposes.
Australia provided $6
million to the Australian Fund for Zimbabwe in 2006-07, for humanitarian
assistance and to support civil society organizations that promote
democracy and human rights. The Government expects to contribute
double this amount in 2007-08.
Though the Australian
Government has suspended development cooperation with the regime
of Robert Mugabe, we recognize the desperate need of ordinary Zimbabweans
and will continue to provide humanitarian relief in the face of
President Mugabe's scandalous economic failures.
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