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Malawi
president denies crisis on maize stocks
Reuters
February 10, 2008
http://africa.reuters.com/business/news/usnBAN045842.html
Lilongwe - Malawi
President Bingu wa Mutharika has denied the country is running out
of maize despite a report that two people starved to death, and
opposition claims that the government sold too much of its maize
to Zimbabwe.
Wa Mutharika said late
on Saturday the Southern African nation had enough maize to feed
its people for a year, and accused the opposition of spreading lies.
"I promised Malawi
to turn it into a hunger-free nation. I promised to turn Malawi
from a net importer of food into a net exporter of food, and we
have achieved this," he told the Farmers Union of Malawi.
"Even when we say
there is food security, there will still be some people who will
go hungry."
The independent Zodiak
Radio station reported last week that two people died of hunger
in the central town of Ntchisi. The deaths were later confirmed
by authorities in the district.
Malawi, one of the poorest
nations in the world, started rationing the sale of maize last week
following a report in parliament that the country's stocks are dwindling
as heavy flooding wiped out many crops.
The floods could ease
expected economic growth of more than seven percent after years
of strong expansion fuelled largely by good maize harvests, economic
reforms and an increase in aid.
Malawi harvested 3.1
million tonnes of maize in the last planting season, its biggest
in 10 years. The government exported 400,000 tonnes to neighbouring
Zimbabwe, which is battling a chronic economic crisis.
U.N. agencies in the
country estimate that a million or more people may need food aid
as floods continue to destroy crop fields in 14 districts. About
72,000 people have been left homeless and six killed by flooding.
The main opposition Malawi
Congress Party has accused the administration of selling off too
much maize stock to Zimbabwe.
"We had warned the
government not to sell 400,000 tonnes to Zimbabwe at our expense
and now this is what is happening. We ask them to stop exporting
with immediate effect," MCP President John Tembo said.
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