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Food
Security and Agriculture
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-33
Monday August 16th - Sunday August 22th 2004
Debate over
the country's food security raged on in the week with more
private media reports rebutting government claims that its agrarian
reforms had yielded sufficient food for the country.
While they pointed out
that the reforms had led to the destruction of the country's
agricultural sector the government-controlled media steadfastly
defended the authorities' policies.
But this defence was
made more difficult by conflicting government statements over the
exact food security situation. For example, despite the authorities'
famous predictions of a bumper harvest of at least 2.8 million tonnes
of cereal, ZTV (16/8, 6am) quoted Social Welfare Minister Paul Mangwana
as telling Parliament that the country needed "177 000 tonnes
of food" to feed people facing food shortages. As a result,
he said, government had set aside $48 billion for such humanitarian
relief.
However, the station
did not ask him how this related to the number of people facing
starvation or whether government had the resources to cope with
the humanitarian relief programmes.
This was especially so
as Power FM and Radio Zimbabwe (18/08, 1pm) reported ZANU PF MP
Edward Chindori-Chininga as urging government to conduct food assessments
in the country urgently as "areas like Masvingo and Matabeleland
are in need of food aid".
But even as his officials
inadvertently admitted to widespread starvation in the country,
The Sunday Mail and the Sunday News (22/8) quoted President Mugabe
berating Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube for exposing the starvation
calamity.
Said Mugabe: "Where
are you getting all that? Where in Zimbabwe have people died of
hunger?"
But as SW Radio Africa
(17/8) surmised, the appeals for food relief by Mugabe's officers
"contradict and totally embarrass the government".
Despite this, Mangwana
still maintained on ZTV (18/8, 8pm): "We have asked donors
to move away from general food distribution because we are now able
to feed our own people."
But Studio 7 (18/8),
carried two stories on food shortages in Zimbabwe, one of which
quoted Binga MP Joel Gabhuza sending an SOS to donors and sympathisers
to help feed "at least 100 families in the area (who) are
in desperate need of food aid".
In the same vein The
Zimbabwe Independent reported that the Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment
Committee (ZIMVAC) had revealed that Zimbabwe would need 52,000
tonnes of food aid for the period between July and November because
"about 2,2 million people in the rural areas will not be able
to meet all their food needs on their own". In addition, ZIMVAC
bemoaned the suspension of supplementary feeding by aid agencies
because of government claims that the country had sufficient food
saying "this was likely to leave a majority of households
vulnerable to hunger".
In fact, The Standard
(22/08) reported that Rotary International, a charitable organisation,
had responded to reports of starvation in Bulawayo by donating 100
tonnes of maize-meal to over 20 families.
Only the private media
was categorical about the extent that agricultural production had
been eroded by agrarian reform. For example, SW Radio Africa (18/8)
reported that Charleswood Farm, owned by MDC MP Roy Bennet but which
government "illegally" seized had now been "completely
run down", with "no production taking place".
The Independent reported
that other once prosperous commercial farms were fallow because
most resettled farmers "say they have no resources such as
draught power or money to farm", while SW Radio Africa (18/8)
reported that continued farm violence by militant ZANU PF activists
had also forced more commercial farmers off their farms.
To corroborate this,
the Independent cited a 2003 Commercial Farmers' Union report
noting that farm production had plummeted since the inception of
the fast track land reform programme. It claimed that the production
of flue-cured tobacco and maize had each dropped by 72 percent,
cotton by 95 percent and soyabeans by 70 percent.
The government media
glossed over these problems. For example, the Chronicle (20/8) reported
that the newly resettled farmers in Mberengwa had "recorded
a bumper maize harvest", while their communal counterparts
were in need of food relief.
ZTV (20/8, 6pm) dutifully
quoted RBZ governor Gideon Gono assuring farmers at the Indigenous
Commercial Farmers Union congress, that government had set aside
enough money for the agricultural sector to ensure that "Zimbabwe
returns to its status of being the breadbasket of Africa".
But the Zimbabwe Tobacco
Association did not share such optimism. A ZTA official told Studio
7 (18/8) that mainly because farmers had failed "to access
loans from government", Zimbabwe's tobacco output this
season would remain the same as that just harvested.
Power FM (18/8, 1pm)
grudgingly acknowledged that tobacco production had experienced
"an 18.06% drop" from last year, but distorted this
development by measuring the financial turnover in local currency.
Thus it claimed that gross turnover at the Tobacco Auction Floors
actually translated into a "333% increase in local currency
trends" even though "the total sales reflect a drop
rom US$144m realised last year to US$118.4m".
The station ignored the
highly inflationary environment under which it calculated the purported
increase.
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