|
Back to Index
Food
insecurity threatens rural villages
IRIN
News
April 09, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=88766
The villagers of Nkalanje,
in Zimbabwe's arid Matabeleland South Province, use bells tied around
the necks of their livestock to track animals that roam ever greater
distances in search of sparse tufts of grass as a dry spell tightens
its grip in the already food insecure country.
Nicholas Ntepe, 40, told
IRIN he often spent days away from home to find his livestock and
bring them closer to home. "It is a tough life, because I have
to divide my time between looking for my livestock and looking for
food to feed my family."
An assessment at the
beginning of April indicated that crops had failed in all seven
districts of Matabeleland South, and an estimated 9,000 tons of
maize would be required each month to mitigate the effects of the
expected food shortages.
The governor of the province,
Angeline Masuku, told IRIN: "We have not yet had distress calls,
possibly because some people are still surviving on produce such
as pumpkins, but we expect to stock up maize so that we are found
ready when the food shortages become more pronounced."
Masuku said although
the province had received occasional drizzle, which had improved
pastures, most of the crops were a write-off and sparse pastures
posed a serious threat to villagers' livestock.
The province plans to
introduce a scheme in which villagers undertake community improvement
tasks, such as assisting clinics, schools and other public institutions,
in return for food.
A similar situation is
unfolding in Midlands Province, where the harvest is projected to
fail in most parts, with the districts of Mberengwa, Zvishavane,
Shurugwi, Gweru and Mvuma hardest hit.
About 2.4 million people
received food assistance in the first quarter of 2010 and a recent
UNICEF report noted that "approximately 78 percent of the population
of Zimbabwe is absolutely poor, and 55 percent live below the food
poverty line".
People living below the
food poverty line cannot meet any of their basic needs and suffer
chronic hunger. The report said an estimated 6.6 million people,
including 3.5 million children, were suffering this extreme form
of deprivation.
'We
need food aid as of yesterday'
A report by the Famine
Early Warning System Network (FEWSNET) said although most households
in rural areas had come through the peak hunger season, adverse
agricultural conditions were affecting Masvingo, Matabeleland South
and Manicaland provinces, among other areas.
"It's another bad
year for the province, as only three out of eight districts are
likely to record meaningful harvests this year," Jason Machaya,
governor of Midlands, told IRIN. "The tonnage is far less than
what we require to feed all the families that have run out of food,
and there is urgent need to source more maize."
Chief Ngungumbane, in
Mberengwa district, Midlands, told IRIN: "People here have
not harvested anything for the past two years. At the moment only
one NGO [which he did not name] is assisting people under the food-for-work
programme, but this is not enough because most families ran out
of food last year."
The people who were most
vulnerable would slip through the net if they could not work. "Those
living with HIV and AIDS, the aged and the disabled cannot benefit,
yet they are the worst affected," Ngungumbane said.
Nyasha Zindove,
the administrator of Zaka district in Masvingo Province, said there
was urgent need for food relief. "We need food aid as of yesterday,
at least 100,000 villagers are vulnerable.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|