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75
000 tonnes of grain damaged at GMB
Bridget
Mananavire, Daily News
October 08, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/10/08/75-000-tonnes-of-grain-damaged-at-gmb
Zimbabwe has
lost tens of thousands tonnes of maize grain at its Grain Marketing
Board (GMB) silos which remain empty while citizens face starvation.
According to
documents in possession of the Daily News, the GMB has written off
75 000 tonnes of maize grain from 2011 to 2012, with the bulk of
the maize having been water damaged.
Multiple certificates
were issued by GMB, which is charged with grain procurement and
securing reserves, after the grain reserve was damaged.
Albert Mandizha,
GMB general manager, admitted to the Daily News that the silos were
empty, but said damaged grain was not a new development.
“I am
surprised there is any damaged grain to talk about at the moment
because we do not have any grain,” he said referring further
questions to the corporate communications manager Muriel Zemura.
A former bread
basket of Southern Africa, Zimbabwe is currently spending millions
in grain importation from neighbouring Zambia, whilst farmers are
turning to tobacco farming due to its financial rewards.
According to
government, an order of 150 000 tonnes has been placed from Zambia
as part of an effort to plug a grain deficit.
“There
is no rotten or under-grade maize at our depots,” Zemura said.
“The maize being distributed under the grain loan scheme is
quality imported maize from Zambia and deliveries from local Zimbabwean
farmers.
“Other
than imports by government from Zambia, other players in the industry
are also importing grain for their own production purposes. There
is natural deterioration of maize after three years depending on
the storage conditions. This is not a loss to the company as it
actually becomes expensive to continue to keep it and fumigating
it instead of disposing it to stock feed users.”
The 75 000 tonnes
of grain was damaged through rot, moisture and termite damage.
“Under
normal circumstances this grain should have been kept securely for
cases of emergency, now we have nothing in the reserves because
the grain was not managed well,” said a source at the GMB.
More than 2,2
million people in Zimbabwe’s 10 political provinces are facing
famine, according to the recent United Nations statistics.
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