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One
million need food assistance
IRIN
News
November 23, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=94286
After a thin
harvest, Rudo Mangwere, 32, a farmer in Chirumhanzu district, some
200km southwest of Harare, Zimbabwe's capital, has resorted to selling
wild honey by the roadside to beat hunger. She is one of just over
a million rural Zimbabweans who will struggle to feed themselves
for the next four months.
A single mother
with three school-going children, Mangwere's poor harvest was partly
the result of inadequate rainfall in her area during the 2010/11
farming season, but also because she has no access to draught animals
- oxen or a horse - to pull a plough.
''Almost every
family from my area is on the road [side] these days, selling honey,
mazhanje (wild loquats) and firewood. We hardly harvested anything,
and this is the only way we can keep our children from starving,''
Mangwere told IRIN.
Like most households
from her community in Midlands Province, she can no longer pay her
children's school fees and the family is surviving on wild fruits
and one main meal in the evening, she said. Although food is readily
available in the local shops, most of the villagers do not have
the money to buy it.
A report by
the Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee (ZIMVAC), a government-led
consortium of UN agencies, official bodies and non-governmental
organizations which conducts annual food security assessments, found
that 12 percent of the rural population "will not be able to
meet their minimum cereal needs during the 2011/12 season".
The figure represents
a slight improvement over the 15 percent who needed food assistance
in the 2010/11 season. Parts of Zimbabwe have been hit by a number
of poor harvests caused by too little rain, a shortage of income
to buy farming inputs, and poor planning, which have forced the
government to import cereals and the hungry to depend on food donations.
The report notes
that the drought-prone southern and western areas of the country
have been most affected, particularly the Masvingo and Matabeleland
North and South provinces, where subsistence farming is the sole
source of income for most rural households.
"Agricultural
production in these regions was once again poor this season,"
said Felix Bamezon, country director of the UN World Food Programme
(WFP), in a recent statement. ''The situation is made worse by the
economic downturn and we're already seeing families resorting to
skipping meals and reducing portion sizes."
WFP is implementing
a targeted seasonal programme of food distributions, cash transfers
and food vouchers to assist low-income households and families with
orphans and vulnerable children.
Tomson Phiri,
a WFP spokesperson, told IRIN that the programme aimed to reach
about 200,000 households in the affected regions with cereals, beans
and vegetables during the peak hunger period between November and
March.
''We have targeted
34 districts and are already on the ground in 24 districts where
we are registering and assisting those in need,'' he said.
WFP is appealing
for US$42 million to cover a shortfall in funding for its food assistance
programmes in Zimbabwe.
"Longer-term
measures such as greater investment in agriculture and the livestock
sector are essential," said Bamezon. "But for now, those
who are most vulnerable need urgent assistance."
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