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UN
agencies barred from food assessment for 'political reasons'
IRIN
News
March 16, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=92209
UN agencies and other
non-government stakeholders are being barred by Zimbabwe's
agricultural minister from participating in food and crop assessment
surveys on the basis of "national security".
"The issue [of crop
and food assessments] is a national security matter that should
be treated with the utmost caution and exclusivity, hence our decision
as government to exclude outsiders from the surveys. UN agencies
in particular are not welcome because they send out negative information
about the country. We don't want to have politics in food
issues," agriculture minister Joseph Made, a member of President
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party, told IRIN.
The UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP), with the government
and other agencies, have in the past compiled crop and food assessments
to determine national food availability, forecast any possible shortages
and initiate plans to cover shortfalls.
In June 2008, during
a year that witnessed violent presidential and parliamentary elections,
the FAO/WFP crop assessment initially forecast that 5.1 million
people would require food aid in the first quarter of 2009; this
subsequently increased to seven million.
"The first crop
assessment has already been carried out but we are withholding the
findings because they have to be presented to cabinet first. However,
we are knee-deep in the districts and provinces doing the second
round of assessments and we don't want to do a half-baked
job," Made said.
He said areas had been
identified that were critically short of maize, the staple, and
"we are already moving grain to those places, to ensure no
one starves".
David Mfote, from the
FAO Zimbabwe country office, told IRIN by email: "Unfortunately,
we are not in a position to give you answers [to questions relating
to the crop and livestock assessments], mainly because as for this
year, government carried out the first crop assessment on its own.
The same is also applying for the second crop assessment. As a result,
we have not been able to travel to the countryside to assess the
crop situation."
Dry
spell
The 2010-2011 main agricultural
season began well, with normal to above-normal rainfall in many
parts of the country, but a four-week dry spell in February is thought
to have adversely affected crop production and according to a food
security analyst, who declined to be named, there have been "high
rates of crop failures".
Analysts told IRIN that
the exclusion of UN agencies and other parties was designed to manipulate
food access when there is speculation about elections. Both President
Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai of the Movement
for Democratic Change have expressed increasing dissatisfaction
with the more than two-year-old unity government.
Eric Bloch, a Bulawayo
economist and member of the Reserve Bank economic advisory board,
told IRIN: "Government has in the past exaggerated projected
crop yields and the same could happen this year. This has the unfortunate
effect of jeopardizing financial planning in the event that there
is a food crisis this year, as is highly likely.
"Once the wrong
forecasts are made, the government will be forced to make quick
and hasty decisions to deal with a humanitarian disaster; the economy
is performing poorly and financial resources are limited, and it
will be difficult to mobilize the money to import maize and other
necessary cereals to ensure basic food security," he said.
Bloch said the exclusion
of international humanitarian organizations threatened access to
international food aid because "these organizations will take
it in a bad light and are likely to insist on doing interventions
based on independent information instead of that from a government
that might lack credibility".
'Inflated
yields'
John Robertson, an economist
in the capital Harare, said the decision to exclude outside agencies
from the crop assessment was done to cast Mugabe's fast-track land-reform
programme in a positive light.
Launched in 2000, it
saw the often violent redistribution of white-owned farms to landless
black Zimbabweans and plunged the country into a recession from
which it has yet to recover.
"The exclusion [of
the humanitarian agencies] is purely for political reasons. President
Mugabe's side of the government, to which agriculture minister
Made belongs, wants to make the statement that land reform in Zimbabwe
is succeeding. In this case, they are likely to inflate figures
of yields and also seek to blame only the weather for poor yields,"
Robertson said.
He forecast that Zimbabwe
might need to import one million tons of maize this year "at
a cost of close to half a billion dollars".
International agencies
estimate that about 1.7 million Zimbabweans require food assistance
during the first quarter of 2011 or the "lean season",
which ends with the April harvest.
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