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Monitor
says prompt action needed to avert wide hunger in Zimbabwe
Patience
Rusere, VOA News
September 25, 2007
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/2007-09-25-voa54.cfm
The food crisis
in Zimbabwe is likely to get worse over the next six months, according
to the latest report
from the U.S.-based Famine Early Warning System, or FEWSNET. But
widespread hunger can be averted by a combination of government
food imports, stepped up international food aid and a normal agricultural
season in 2008.
FEWSNET warned, however,
that if the government cannot address the looming food deficit and
if international food assistance is limited, a "worst-case
scenario with more widespread and extreme food insecurity affecting
a large proportion of rural and urban populations . . . will quickly
emerge." In other words, there is no time to lose.
Even if all of the key
players respond properly and in time, the agency said, Zimbabwe
will still face what it described as a "a persistent and serious
food crisis."
Though FEWSNET expressed
concern about the ability of the Grain Marketing Board, a state
cereals monopoly, to distribute food efficiently, it noted that
with elections on the calendar early 2008, Harare is likely to step
up efforts to feed the population.
Christian
Care National Director Reverend Forbes Matonga told reporter
Patience Rusere of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that he concurred
with the assessment by FEWSNET, and noted that his own organization
is getting ready to start distributing a new consignment of food
assistance from the World Food Program.
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