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Poor
utilization of land behind Zimbabwe’s hunger threat
Nomalanga
Moyo, SW Radio Africa
October 23, 2013
http://www.swradioafrica.com/2013/10/23/poor-utilization-of-land-behind-zimbabwes-hunger-threat/
Hunger is stalking
millions of people in Zimbabwe as food insecurity grows amid concerns
the Grain Marketing Board (GMB) is on the verge of collapsing, according
to our correspondent in Harare.
Simon Muchemwa,
who has been to several districts in the country in the last month,
told us the current high levels of food insecurity are being attributed
to various factors, including the controversial land grab program
and poor farming methods.
Muchemwa said
the situation is being made worse by the GMB, which has shut down
most of its depots due financial problems. The GMB is the country’s
leading grain trade and marketing company but it owes farmers millions
in dollars from previous farming seasons.
Unlike previous
years where food shortages where concentrated in drought prone areas,
this year the crisis is affecting even the most fertile of lands
in Mashonaland, Manicaland and Midlands provinces.
Speaking on
our weekly program The Hidden Story, Muchemwa said since the start
of the year, the grain reserves have been running dangerously low,
and the situation has been worsened further by farmers concentrating
on cash and not food crops.
Once dubbed
the ‘bread basket of the region’, the country’s
thriving agricultural sector has taken a severe knock after the
violent takeover of white-owned commercial farms by President Robert
Mugabe’s Zanu-PF government.
The country
now imports grain from Zambia and Malawi - countries to which it
used to export. Many of the white farmers who lost their farms and
resettled in Zambia are the ones now providing the grain to Zimbabwe.
‘The problem
with farmers who benefited from the land reform exercise is that
they are mainly growing tobacco for export and only a small percentage
of farmers are growing maize for consumption,’ Muchemwa said.
Our correspondent
added that during his tour of the countryside, he witnessed vast
swathes of prime land not being utilized.
This week, the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) contributed
US$25 million to support vulnerable families suffering the effects
of drought and a poor harvest.
The UN World
Food Programme (WFP) will use this contribution, along with additional
donor funding, to support a relief operation for over 2 million
of the most food-insecure people during the lean season between
October and March 2014, when the next harvest is due.
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