|
Back to Index
Confusion
on food situation
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-42
Monday October 18th - Sunday October 24th
2004
DESPITE the
government media regurgitating claims by the authorities that the
country had reaped enough crops to feed the nation through its land
reforms, The Financial Gazette (21/10) revealed that there
was still confusion, even within government circles, on the exact
amount of grain the country has produced.
The paper revealed
that the parliamentary portfolio committee on agriculture would
summon Agriculture Minister Joseph Made to explain the country’s
food situation.
The weekly also
alleged that even ZANU-PF’s Politburo and the Cabinet had cast doubts
on Made’s projections that the country would produce more than 2,4
million tonnes of cereal.
Lending credence
to fears of food shortages, the paper also cited reports from the
Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWSNET) and Amnesty International
(AI) disputing government’s projections of a bumper harvest saying
millions of people were in need of food aid.
The government
media remained silent on the issue.
As a result,
most Zimbabweans who are now obliged to rely on these media following
the forced closure of alternative sources of information, were left
no wiser on the matter.
In fact, the
government media’s habit of remaining silent over issues that expose
government mismanagement (thereby denying their audiences important
information on pertinent issues affecting their livelihoods) also
manifested itself in the way they reported problems besetting preparations
for the current farming season.
Although these
media reported shortages of farming inputs and implements, they
treated the issues in isolation and failed to view them as symptomatic
of the chaos in the agricultural sector following government’s controversial
land reforms.
Neither did
they fully discuss the underlying implications of the problems on
the country’s food security next year.
As has become
the norm, the responsibility was left to the private media.
For example,
the Zimbabwe Independent (22/10) columnist Eric Bloch contended
that as long as farmers had problems accessing the necessary inputs
"there is no realistic prospect of Zimbabwe producing
sufficient food to sustain itself next year".
The Gazette
also reiterated fears that the maize seed deficit would have an
adverse impact on the country’s ability to produce adequate food
in the coming year.
Visit the MMPZ
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|