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Farm
animals bartered to stave off hunger
IRIN
News
September
30, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=80674
In Dongamuzi
village, in the Lupane district of Zimbabwe's Matabeleland North
Province, Jestina Moyo, 56, is making a deal she knows is unfair,
but she also knows she has little choice but to barter one of her
few remaining cows for six buckets of maize to feed her family.
As in many other villages,
people like Moyo have steadily seen their livestock depleted this
year as animals are exchanged for grain in a bid to survive the
country's acute food shortages.
There is an air of despair
in rural areas. This year's elections brought widespread political
violence on top of worsening food shortages, which the UN estimates
will see more than 5 million people of the country's 12 million
population requiring food assistance in the first quarter of 2009.
In the bitter
election contest earlier in 2008, President Robert Mugabe's ruling
ZANU-PF party banned
non-governmental organisations (NGOs), including those distributing
food, from operating for nearly three months on allegations of political
interference. Although the restrictions have been lifted, hunger
still stalks the country.
Moyo exchanged her cow
to feed her eight orphaned grandchildren and a sick relative in
her care. "After pounding the maize, the mealie-meal [maize-meal]
I will get will only last a month, as I have to make porridge for
the children before they go to school and I have to cook lunch and
dinner. The amount is too little, as I am taking care of a sick
nephew who has to eat frequently throughout the day," Moyo
told IRIN.
"These people are
taking advantage of the food shortages to rip us off. The exchange
is not fair but I have no choice, as there is no grain throughout
the whole district; but this is a rip-off," Moyo said, watching
the cow being loaded onto the truck that will take it, along with
many others, about 200km southeast to Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second
city.
So far this year she
has bartered six cows for either food or money to pay her grandchildren's
school fees. "At the beginning the year things were better
because villagers were selling the cows for cash, and this allowed
us to buy more grain amongst ourselves, but the whole village has
nothing now and we have to get the grain from outsiders, who only
want to exchange the maize for livestock," Moyo said.
She said one bucket of maize was now equal to four live chickens
or a goat, while five buckets of maize were where negotiations started
for a cow.
Livestock was also being
exchanged for soap, cooking oil, flour, sugar and salt, which are
not available from shops.
Zimbabwe's annual inflation
rate of more than 11 million percent has made the local currency
all but worthless, and although many city residents have resorted
to using foreign currency, in the poor rural areas the only items
of value people possess are their animals.
"Villagers are losing
a lot of their livestock to these people from urban areas who are
ripping us off, and as long as the hunger issue is not resolved
we will continue losing our livestock," Moyo said.
"President Mugabe and [Morgan] Tsvangirai [leader of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)] should come up with their
unity government, so that we will have food on the table. You should
tell them we are starving, and if nothing is done we will all die,"
Moyo told IRIN.
Zimbabwe's political
leaders agreed to a power-sharing deal on 15 September, but the
formation of a unity government is being stalled by bickering over
ministerial posts.
Thomas Ncube, 58, who
also lives in Dongamuzi, told IRIN he had exchanged all his goats
and had nothing left to barter with. "The people who are selling
maize are refusing cash, saying the Zimbabwean dollar loses value
fast and they only exchange the grain with livestock, and most villagers
have become poor from exchanging their livestock for grain."
The misfortune of the villagers is providing George Ncube, who has
a lucrative business touring the countryside bartering farm animals
for maize, and then sells the livestock to city abattoirs and butcheries.
"We [dealers] are
providing a service because the people will die of hunger. We are
exchanging items; there is no robbery, as the exchange is done on
a willing-buyer, willing-seller basis, and if one is not happy then
they do not become part of the deal," said Ncube.
Verging
on starvation
The MDC parliamentarian
for Lupane North, Njabuliso Mguni, told IRIN the food shortages
in his constituency were reaching critical levels. "The food
aid agencies are returning, but not all villagers qualify for food
aid, and that leaves quite a large number on the verge of starvation,
and they are now resorting to selling off and exchanging their livestock
for survival," Mguni said.
Zimbabwe's main harvest will only be gathered in March 2009, so
the prospect of the food security situation improving anytime soon
is remote. Making matters worse is that small-scale farmers have
no access to vital agricultural inputs, such as fertiliser and seed.
"We are less than a month into the farming season and already
there is no fertiliser or maize seed being made available to villagers,"
Mguni said. "And I foresee all this repeating itself in future."
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