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Government suspension of NGO field operations - Index of articles
Listening
for the trucks that will bring the food
IRIN News
August 28, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80056
Hungry residents
of a village in Masvingo Province, in southeastern Zimbabwe, have
acquired an unusual skill: they have learnt to listen for trucks
carrying food aid.
Elijah Banguza, 69, has
become the village expert and can now identify vehicles by their
sound, long before they appear on the road used by government and
non-governmental organisation (NGOs) trucks.
The villagers
are waiting for the grain the government promised them, but aid
agency trucks have not come down the road since a ban
was imposed on NGO operations in June. More than five million Zimbabweans
will suffer food insecurity by March 2009, according to aid agencies,
but many are already experiencing food shortages.
Banguza's skill saves
villagers the distress of coming back empty-handed after pushing
wheelbarrows, or driving donkeys or ox-drawn scotch-carts, for several
kilometres to the business centre where maize used to be delivered
for distribution.
"Now I can tell
whether it is a haulage truck, a bus or passenger vehicle with the
same ease with which politicians and local leaders have let us down,"
Banguza said. "Promised ... grain deliveries ... never materialise,
week in and week out. Perhaps it is because the elections are over,
we don't know."
In the run-up to the
general elections in March, the Zimbabwean authorities assured people
that government had imported 600,000 metric tonnes (mt) of maize
from Malawi and Zambia, but mainly from South Africa.
But in the in the period
before the second round of voting in the presidential ballot on
27 June, the government suspended all NGO activities, alleging political
bias.
UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon recently urged the authorities to lift the ban and "avert
a catastrophic humanitarian crisis", saying that "Due
to their [NGOs] inability to operate, only 280,000 people of the
1.5 million in need of food assistance are being reached with distributions."
Little
food to go around
Banguza's wife, Ruvimbo,
lamented: "We are starving and no one seems to care about our
plight. Our livestock will soon perish." She leant against
an empty granary as she picked out kernels of maize from among the
dried leaves in a half-empty reed basket. "This is all the
grain we have."
She and her three granddaughters
are lucky to have half a basket of grain to cook for supper; other
families in the area have gone without meals for days, and any chance
of the winter wheat harvest providing relief has also faded.
According to official
estimates, about 8,900 hectares of winter wheat was planted - 13
percent of the area required to produce the more than 400,000mt
the country needs to meet its annual requirement.
The government recently
introduced a Basic Commodity Supply Side Intervention (BACOSSI)
programme to cushion ordinary Zimbabweans from the escalating prices
of basic household commodities, but this has done little to alleviate
the villagers' plight.
"What we need is
grain, not affordable hampers containing luxuries like sugar, cooking
oil and toothpaste," Banguza complained. "We have survived
on sadza [a thick maize-meal porridge] as a staple; who wants clean
and healthy teeth when he is starving?"
Bartering
livestock
Villagers in Masvingo
tell how one of them sought to barter an ox for a bag of grain -
a very uneven trade - to illustrate their dire situation. Experts
say bartering might further impoverish the villagers because they
will lack critical draught power to prepare their land in the coming
planting season.
"It creates a huge
dilemma for farmers," said local agricultural extension officer
Jervas Rera. "They have to choose whether to barter their livestock
to meet immediate needs in the form of grain, or face the prospect
of failing to prepare their fields for lack of draught power in
time for the onset of the wet season."
Malnutrition
up
Food shortages have also
increased malnutrition among pupils who benefited from supplementary
feeding schemes funded and run by NGOs, mainly at schools and in
poor communities.
When the twice-yearly
national child health days, aimed at reaching the country's two
million children aged under five with essential Vitamin A supplements
and immunisation, kicked off in early August, the UN children's
agency, UNICEF, expressed grave concern over the ongoing ban.
"We applaud and
are committed to efforts such as the Child Health Campaign, but
we cannot forget that a growing number of children are suffering
daily because of the NGO ban," said UNICEF's Regional Director,
Per Engebak.
"Every day that
such an important lifeline of humanitarian aid for children remains
cut off puts the children of this country at ever greater risk."
The week-long US$1 million
campaign was supported by essential funding from the UK's Department
for International Development (DFID), Canada's International Development
Agency (CIDA) and UNICEF's National Committee of the Netherlands.
Zimbabwe is reeling under
galloping inflation officially pegged at 11.27 million percent,
although independent economists and bankers have put the rate as
high as 22 million percent.
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