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Food
crisis worsens
Davison
Makanga, Inter Press Service
October
16, 2008
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44290
Zimbabwe's agricultural
production has been hit by a long list of difficulties -- several
rounds of severe drought, a collapsed currency that has made fertiliser
and other farm inputs very expensive, ill-considered land redistribution,
and brutal pre- and post- election violence by the ruling ZANU-PF
that has hurt rural populations most.
"Generally in Zimbabwe people are living from hand to mouth,
there is no food in the shops; those who had farmed didn't produce
enough for themselves and also for the nation. The general population
is starving. There is no food. People can not even get food to buy,
so it's a difficult situation people of Zimbabwe find themselves
in," said Lovemore Chinoputsa, a civil rights activist.
In the arid south-western
provinces of Matebeleland, some desperate villagers are eating inedible
wild fruits or unripe mangoes to survive. The aid agency Save The
Children in September reported that "many people in the Zambezi
Valley, the poorest and driest area, were now surviving on a vile-tasting,
fibrous root called makuri."
Wilson Khumbula, leader
of a minority opposition party, ZANU-Ndonga, told IPS that poor
families in south-eastern parts of the country and rural Masvingo
are begging for grain door to door. "People have now resorted
to begging and some are marrying off their young daughters to privileged
families in exchange of grain. This is how dire the situation has
gone."
The United Nations World
Food Program (WFP) has described the situation as a national crisis
and appealed for 140 million dollars to feed 3.75 million people
it expects will be in need of food aid by January next year.
"The situation is
already critical in many rural areas, particularly in the worst
affected southern districts but also in some districts in the east,
centre and northwest of the country. A large number of farmers harvested
very little this year and have now exhausted their meagre stocks,"
said WFP spokesperson Richard Lee.
Zimbabwe's food situation
was worsened by a three-month ban on relief work imposed by government
in June this year. The ban was lifted at the end August, but non-governmental
organizations are yet to resume full-scale operations.
Political interference
during food distribution continues in some parts of the country.
ZANU-PF officials are demanding that only their supporters get food
under the government-initiated subsidy programme, the Basic Commodity
Supply Side Intervention. Alois Chaumba, chairman of Zimbabwe
Peace Project, a civic organisation that promotes tolerance
told IPS that rural Manicaland and Midlands provinces are the most
affected.
Hope for a better harvest
next year is fading; experts have warned that Zimbabwe's food crisis
is set to claw into 2009 due to ill preparation.
The government portfolio
for agricultural support, the Resource Mobilisation and Utilisation
Committee, headed by Dr Mariyawanda Nzuwa is battling to cope with
farmers needs. The department is now giving inputs to selected farmers
with a 'track record' of good farming skills. However, minister
of Information and Publicity Dr Sikhanyiso Ndlovu told IPS that
his government is ready for the farming season. He says farmers
in the country have been provided inputs under the government-sponsored
'Farm Mechanisation program'.
"The plan from the
government is that no one should suffer from hunger in the country.
We are restoring Zimbabwe into the breadbasket of the region because
of this preparedness. We only hope to God that we have good rains,"
said Dr Ndlovu.
Renson Gasela, a food
security expert and former head of the state parastatal Grain Marketing
Board differs with Ndlovu. He says there are no signs of preparation
on the ground.
"It's already too
late to make any meaningful impact as far as the food situation
is concerned because we are only three to four weeks away from rainfall
and yet there isn't anything that has been prepared, we read a lot
of what is being done but on the ground there is nothing,"
explained Gasela.
Henrick Olivier, chief
executive officer of the Commercial Farmers Union, says the impending
season is a 'disaster' before it even starts. He says in addition
to continuing eviction of white commercial farmers, inputs are in
short supply. He points out that only 40,000 tonnes of fertiliser
and 9000 tonnes of maize seed is available.
"This coming season...
before it even started, it's been a disaster, there is no inputs,
there is no fuel, fertiliser, chemicals or seed available and whatever
is available is in short supply. There is no preparations whatsoever.
It's not a good season that's lying ahead of us," said Olivier
According to Gasela,
Zimbabwe requires an annual total of one million tonnes of grain
for human consumption and 400,000 tonnes for industrial use, but
with haphazard preparations way behind schedule, a harvest that
size might be a distant dream for the country.
Relief aid organizations
have reacted swiftly to distribute emergency food in worst affected
areas, but the task is overwhelming. Some families are accusing
relief aid groups of selective assistance. The aid agencies are
targeting only poor families, leaving out those deemed to be privileged
and vetting is at the discretion of humanitarian workers.
"There is no food
in the country, so these NGOs should help everyone, we are in the
same situation as everyone," said a distraught Masvingo villager
who was left off the beneficiary list.
However, humanitarian
organisations say beneficiaries will be increased once they resume
full-scale operations, but for now, as WFP points out, the immediate
task is to address the funding shortfall.
"Over the last five
years we have had a fantastic response from the international community,"
said the WFP's Lee. "The donors have been remarkably generous,
providing us with hundreds of millions of dollars, but unfortunately
we do still need more, and we urgently need those donations so that
we can get food to the people who need it in Zimbabwe.
"At the moment we
will run out of stocks in January, just as the crisis is reaching
its peak, so we really need extra resources now so that we can make
sure we get enough food into Zimbabwe and it out to the people who
need it most."
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