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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
NGO
ban starting to bite
IRIN
News
July 07, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79127
The ban
on non-governmental organization (NGO) activities in the lead-up
to the second round of voting in the presidential ballot is beginning
to bite, according to Zimbabwe's communal farmers, who are weathering
the worst food shortages in living memory.
Alleging political
bias, the government suspended all NGO activities, but the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) claims the ban was instituted
to try and hide the political violence unleashed against its supporters
after the 29 March general elections, in which President Robert
Mugabe's ZANU-PF lost control of parliament for the first time since
the country gained independence from Britain in 1980.
Neither Mugabe
nor MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai was able to win 50 percent plus
one vote in the first round of voting to elect Zimbabwe's president,
necessitating a second round of voting on 27 June, from which Tsvangirai
withdrew after
more than 80 MDC supporters were murdered and tens of thousands
of people displaced by violence, allegedly by ZANU-PF militia.
Hansen Chipembere,
60, a small-scale farmer in the Zvinyaningwe area of Masvingo Province,
about 60km from the provincial capital, Masvingo, told IRIN: "We
are an unlucky lot. This year has been the worst ever for us, and
that is when authorities decide our benefactors (NGOs) should stop
assisting. You can smell the hunger as you move around."
''This year
has been the worst ever for us, and that is when authorities decide
our benefactors (NGOs) should stop assisting. You can smell the
hunger as you move around''
He inherited the land from his father five years ago, but had worked
the smallholding outside the old asbestos mining town of Mashava
for 40 years. During that time, he had never witnessed such levels
of crop failure as that experienced during the 2007/08 season.
The poor harvest
is being blamed on a combination of heavy rains at the beginning
of the planting season, followed by a prolonged dry spell, as well
as the lack of agricultural inputs, such as fertilisers and seed,
leaving farmers without food to feed themselves or any surplus to
produce an income.
Chipembere told
IRIN that government's agricultural planners had consistently failed
to heed the advice of smallholder farmers, which would have made
them less vulnerable to the vagaries of the weather.
His 50ha smallholding
hugs Muzhwi dam, built at a cost of US$5.8 million a decade ago
primarily to augment water supplies to the sugar estates in the
Lowveld, 500km south of the capital, Harare, but also to irrigate
communal lands.
"We can
only watch and admire the scenery while we scrounge for food. That
body of water could alleviate our plight," Chipembere commented.
For the past three years he and other communal farmers have travelled
to Masvingo to try and persuade agricultural planners to design
an irrigation scheme suitable for their area.
"We were
frustrated by the bureaucracy and gave up after spending a lot of
money on bus fares, and investing a lot of time in trying to get
the officials to act," Benjamin Guruva, a smallholder farmer
whose plot borders Muzhwi dam, told IRIN. "We have the farming
experience but have been completely left out of the government scheme."
Food
promised
British
cabinet minister Douglas Alexander, the Secretary of State for International
Development, which promotes poverty alleviation and development
in poor countries, has promised US$18 million to the World Food
Programme to provide for the millions of people expected to require
food assistance. Alexander also called on Zimbabwe to lift the ban
on NGOs, so that aid could reach those in need and facing starvation.
The bulk of
the funding will be used to provide food, but a proportion will
be used to strengthen WFP monitoring systems to prevent political
interference and ensure that the food is received by all those who
require it.
The Food and
Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) crop
assessment forecast, released in June 2008, projected that about
5.1 million Zimbabweans will suffer food insecurity.
"The Mission
estimates that 2.04 million people in rural and urban areas will
be food insecure between July and September 2008, rising to 3.8
million people between October and peaking to about 5.1 million
at the height of the hungry season between January and March 2009,"
the FAO/WFP Crop and Food Supply Assessment Mission to Zimbabwe
said.
Zimbabwe's population
is estimated at about 12 million people, but this does not take
into account the more than three million people thought to have
left the country since 2000 as a result of mounting economic and
political instability.
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