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Hunger
spreading in south
IRIN
News
August 18, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93535
Tedius Bere, 31, from Chivi District in Zimbabwe's southeastern
Masvingo Province, recently travelled to the capital Harare to ask
for his brother's help to buy food for his family, whom he
had left in Chivi with only enough maize meal for two days.
"I had
no choice but to ask my brother for money . . . because we are
facing real starvation," Bere told IRIN as he laboured to
load two 50kg bags of maize meal onto the roof of the bus he would
use to return home.
His 3.2 hectare
plot of maize was severely affected by a prolonged dry spell that
hit the district in late January. "I did not manage to harvest
a single cob," he said, adding that most of his neighbours
and many families in surrounding communities failed to harvest much
this year and were facing a similar predicament.
Bere's
brother, who is employed as a driver by an NGO, has a wife and four
children of his own to look after, as well as other dependants from
the extended family, but he has pledged to make sure his sibling's
family has enough to eat until the next harvest, which is still
about eight months away.
Those families
in Chivi who cannot rely on cash handouts from relatives to get
them through the region's perennial dry spells and poor harvests
are often forced to sell off their livestock to buy basic commodities.
An informal
survey by IRIN revealed that many households from the country's
drought-prone southern provinces are in urgent need of food aid
following the failure of their crops during the 2010-11 farming
season.
Fungai Mabachi,
35, from the populous suburb of Highfield in Harare, recently received
a distress call from her mother who is caring for her two school-going
daughters in her home district of Mwenezi, also in Masvingo Province.
"My mother
sent a relative with a letter saying she will be needing food in
the next few weeks because the maize she managed to get from her
meagre harvest was running out. I told her that I would do my best,
but as a vegetable vendor going through a hard time, I doubt that
I will manage," Mabachi told IRIN.
She said she
had heard that many areas in the district were facing hunger, adding
that only those with irrigation schemes appeared to be safe.
Tariro Mutsvanga,
42, a single mother of two from Shurugwi, about 120km east of Gweru,
capital of Midlands Province, told IRIN that only a handful of households
in her village of more than 800 homesteads had enough food to see
them through to the next harvest.
"You can
count the number of people who will have enough food on your fingers.
These are the people who planted early enough and were therefore
not severely affected by the dry spell," she said.
WFP
waits for assessment results
The World Food
Programme (WFP), which helps food insecure communities during lean
periods through a targeted assistance programme, told IRIN it was
awaiting the findings of the Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee
(ZIMVAC) report to determine which areas required food aid.
"At this
stage, we do not have the beneficiary numbers since we do not have
the ZIMVAC results," said Robert Makasi, WFP senior programme
assistant.
The ZIMVAC report
is usually based on inter-agency assessments by WFP, the Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO), NGOs and government, but this year
the government excluded traditional partners on the basis of "national
security" and the report, which was expected to be released
in July, has yet to be published.
However, other
government survey results indicate that Masvingo, Matabeleland North
and South, Manicaland and pockets of the Midlands and Mashonaland
provinces were affected by poor rainfall, and a recent WFP exercise
revealed that extensive crop failure in some districts would make
food assistance necessary for nine instead of the usual four months.
Makasi estimated that WFP would need about US$59 million for the
programme for the period between November 2011 and March 2012.
The Agriculture
Ministry has estimated a total cereal harvest of 1.6 million tons
which represents an increase of 6 percent from the 2009-10 farming
season. However, some NGOs argue that food insecurity is more severe
than the government's food and crop assessments suggest
Appeal
In early August,
international humanitarian agencies launched an appeal for US$488
million to meet Zimbabwe's immediate needs through the Consolidated
Appeal Process, the humanitarian community's most important fundraising
instrument. The amount is $73 million more than the original request
made in December last year, partly because of concerns about food
security.
The US-based
Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) said in its July
2011 report that most urban and rural households had stable food
stocks but warned that food insecurity would affect many areas in
the coming months as cereal stocks dwindled.
According to
FEWS NET, this year's cereal harvest leaves a deficit of 70,000
tons which would need to be offset through imports, local purchases
and humanitarian aid.
FEWS NET warned,
however, that the reinstatement of duties on basic commodities such
as cooking oil and maize, which had been lifted more than two years
ago to encourage imports, might adversely affect the price and availability
of food, especially between October and December 2011 when many
districts in drought-prone provinces are expected to have exhausted
their household cereal stocks.
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