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Military
seed merchants
IRIN
News
October
23, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=81090
The distribution
of agricultural inputs such as maize seed and fertiliser for the
2008/09 season has become the domain of Zimbabwe's military and
President Robert Mugabe's Zanu PF party. As the first rains fell
in October, farmers flocked to traditional input retailers, only
to be told that the government, through the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe,
had bought all the seed from producers and had centralised the distribution
of agricultural inputs. "We received an instruction that the
government had purchased all the seed and would be responsible for
distribution to the farmers," an official who declined to be
identified told IRIN. "I have been in this business for more
than 20 years and I know the government does not have the capacity
to distribute seed. The best method is the traditional way of allowing
retailers to sell to farmers." The absence of maize seed came
as the Southern Africa Region Climate Outlook Forum, based in neighbouring
South Africa, predicted that Zimbabwe would record normal rainfall
between October and December, a crucial stage in the growth of the
country's staple food.
The commander of Zimbabwe's
defence forces, General Constantine Chiwenga, assisted by senior
military officials, has been given the responsibility of identifying
the beneficiaries of agricultural inputs, and maize seed and fertiliser
have been handed out at Zanu PF rallies to party members and senior
government officials. Chiwenga, speaking at the launch of the initiative
this week, said: "The distribution of inputs will kick off
soon at a lightning speed, and our plan is to make sure that by
November 14 this year, seeds should be underground waiting for the
rains. This year we must all work together so that we eradicate
hunger from our country." State radio reported that distribution
of the maize seed had started in some parts of the country, especially
in the provinces of Mashonaland West, Central and East, the traditional
support bases of Zanu PF. A Zanu PF member in Marondera, a large
town in Mashonaland East Province, told IRIN that senior army officers
responsible for seed distribution were diverting it to the parallel
market. Only a few Zanu PF provincial leaders were allocated seed
and fertiliser, including the "A1" small-scale and communal
farmers and the "A2" new black commercial farmers. "Ordinary
party members, such as myself and other villagers, [were told] that
the inputs had run out," the Zanu PF member, who declined to
be identified, told IRIN. "Known or suspected Movement for
Democratic Change [MDC] supporters did not receive any maize seed
or fertiliser from the soldiers, who are responsible for distribution,"
he said.
MDC spokesperson
Nelson Chamisa told IRIN the military should not be involved in
the distribution of agricultural inputs, as they did not have the
capacity, and there was a possibility that they would be biased
in favour of Zanu PF supporters. "There is a lot of disharmony,
disunity and acrimony, especially in rural communities, which is
being encouraged by Zanu PF," Chamisa said. "We have received
reports of the isolation of MDC members, and this points at Zanu
PF's insincerity about the whole process of dialogue and a new beginning."
A power-sharing deal
signed on 15 September between the MDC and Zanu PF has stalled,
and the two parties are using increasingly acrimonious language
against each other. Renson Gasela, the MDC agricultural secretary
and a former chief executive officer of the Grain Marketing Board,
a parastatal grain monopoly, told IRIN that "we are heading
for another disaster because the seed and fertiliser, which should
be with the farmers, cannot be found." The UN estimates that
more than five million Zimbabweans - or nearly half the population
- will require emergency food assistance in the first quarter of
2009. On 23 October Parliament introduced a motion that the food
shortages constituted a national disaster; a full vote is to be
conducted when the house reconvenes on 11 November. Zanu PF lost
its parliamentary majority for the first time since independence
from Britain in 1980 in the general elections earlier this year.
Gasela said its strategy
now was to distribute seed to small-scale rural farmers in a bid
to buy their loyalty. Agricultural inputs are being sold in foreign
currency on the parallel market; a 10kg bag of maize seed is priced
at US$40, while a 50kg bag of fertiliser retails at US$60. Agriculture
minister Rugare Gumbo told the state-owned The Herald newspaper
in an interview on 23 October that "Anyone who wants to import
inputs like fertiliser and maize seed can come to the ministry and
we can discuss the modalities, as whatever is done has to be authorised
by us." Zimbabwe is suffering an official annual inflation
rate of 231 million percent and foreign currency has become a very
scarce commodity. Gasela said licensing the import of agricultural
inputs would not alleviate the seed and fertiliser shortage, because
"The planting season is upon us already." Anyhow, he added,
it was very unlikely that a farmer would travel to the ministry
in the capital, Harare, pick up a licence, apply for a visa to travel
to South Africa, and then return in time to plant. A journalist
who declined to be named told IRIN after visiting his home in rural
Masvingo Province that hunger was forcing farmers to eat what maize
seed they had, instead of planting it. "Seeds are usually preserved
with a green chemical, but I was told that members of the community
had soaked the maize seeds in water to remove the chemical and consumed
them to avoid starving to death," he said. "Now they are
living on wild fruit, which has caused the deaths of many villagers."
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