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Rampaging
elephants destroying crops
IRIN News
April 15, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77771
Marauding elephants
that escaped from the Hwange National Park, an animal sanctuary
in rural southwestern Zimbabwe, are destroying any hopes among peasant
farmers of a moderately successful harvest.
Arid climatic conditions
are expected to blight agricultural production in the southwest
this year, according to a recent forecast by the UN's Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO), while Zimbabwe's political and economic turmoil
is also affecting both food production and food security.
Elephants from the 14,600
square kilometre nature reserve, which lies about 150km south of
Victoria Falls on the main road to Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo,
are straying from the park in search of food, wreaking havoc on
the meagre crops villagers were expecting to harvest after the summer
rains ended prematurely.
Erica Hlongwane, 46,
spends most of her time protecting the remnants of her wilting maize
crop from further destruction by elephants, at the expense of her
household chores.
"Life has become
unbearable because of these elephants which destroy our crops,"
said Hlongwane, who lives with a teenage daughter and a younger
son in the rural Tsholotsho district, about 100km northwest of Bulawayo,
in Matabeleland North Province, while her husband works in neighbouring
South Africa.
"On one hand we
worry about the prospect of hunger because of crop failure, while
on the other we count the losses stray elephants are causing daily,"
she told IRIN, displaying a few maize cobs she had managed to salvage
after a herd of elephants rampaged through her small field the previous
night.
"We also fear the
elephants might demolish our pole-and-mud huts," she said.
Despite attempts by the villagers to scare away the elephants, using
drums and hand-made cymbals, she said bull elephants would sometimes
charge the villagers, who are no match for an elephant.
"The authorities
should save us from this ordeal," Hlongwane said, referring
to the National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (NPWMA),
which is responsible for managing problem animals.
Another peasant farmer
in the district told IRIN he had lost nearly a fifth of his sorghum
crop to browsing elephants and blamed the NPWMA for ignoring the
villagers' appeals for assistance.
"We heeded advice
from agricultural experts to grow small grains as a hedge against
possible erratic rains, as this is a semi-dry area, but our hopes
have been shattered by elephant herds that roam this area,"
said Timothy Dakamela, another small-scale farmer.
Fears
of food shortages
Dakamela
said the ZANU-PF government should provide food aid to avert serious
food shortages in the district's villages. About one-third of Zimbabwe's
around 12 million population are receiving emergency food aid.
"Unless something
is done to stop the elephant menace we will solicit for food again,
although we had anticipated we would be able to fend for our families
for the better part of the year from the hectarage we had put under
crop," he said.
A joint crop assessment
report, released in March by Zimbabwe's Ministry of Agriculture
and the FAO, indicated that a shortage of agricultural inputs, such
as seed and fertilisers, meant Zimbabwe could face another grain
shortfall this year.
FAO said in a statement
on 10 April that extremely dry weather in several provinces of Zimbabwe
"is likely to cause serious damage to the main 2008 maize harvest.
This could aggravate an already precarious food security situation
in the country."
Hlongwane and Dakamela,
who have yet to receive agricultural inputs from the state, said
the destruction wrought by stray elephants was their major concern.
Dakamela said elephants
had roamed their districts in the past, but an electric fence had
controlled the movement of wildlife and deterred elephants from
encroaching on villagers' homesteads and crops. The fence has been
vandalised and has fallen into disrepair, while power outages are
commonplace.
The presence
of elephants used to be a boon to the villagers, but three years
ago the Communal
Areas Management and Programme of Indigenous Resources (Campfire),
collapsed as a result of donor fatigue, depriving the surrounding
communities of the benefit of wildlife management and its proceeds.
The Campfire system had
enabled communities to establish income-generating businesses, such
as tourist lodges, build clinics and schools, and maintain social
structures, quite apart from the protection of their crops afforded
by the electric fences.
Cash-strapped local district
councils assumed management of Campfire, but are grappling to make
it sustainable amid an eight-year economic recession that has brought
Zimbabwe the world's highest annual inflation rate of more than
100,000 percent and a sharp drop in international tourism.
Zeb Mutoki, head of Matabeleland
North's National Parks and Wildlife Authority, said local district
council officials were mandated to deal with problem animals in
their areas, and were permitted to enlist professional hunters to
cull problem animals, such as elephants. The proceeds of the cull
were used to compensate villagers who had suffered crop losses.
"Only when the problem
is too serious for them to manage and control on their own do they
seek our assistance," Mutoki said. At the moment district council
officials in that area have not sent us an SOS."
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