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Agricultural
chaos and food insecurity
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-15
Monday April 10th 2006 - Sunday April 16th 2006
THIS week the
government media continued to evade tackling the root causes of
Zimbabwe’s agricultural decline in the 95 stories they devoted to
the subject, of which 29 were in the official Press and 66 on ZBH.
This was reflected
in the way they subordinated open discussions on the ills blighting
the sector to mundane official statements that projected government
as committed to addressing the problems. In fact, almost half of
the stories ZBH carried on the topic were passive regurgitations
of statements made by Vice President Joice Mujuru during her over
publicized national tours.
As a result,
government media’s audiences remained uncertain on the extent of
the troubles haunting farming, the crop prospects for this season
and whether the yields would be enough to see the country through
to the next agricultural season.
ZBH’s evening
bulletins (11/4) captured this uncritical approach.
The broadcaster
merely celebrated the government’s announcement that it would inject
eight million litres of diesel into this season’s wheat farming
without subjecting the matter to scrutiny. For instance, it would
not inquire whether the fuel was enough to sustain the sector or
question the proposed bureaucratic distribution mechanism, which
involves district administrators, police, war veterans, farmers’
organisations, ZANU PF and government officials.
Neither would
it wonder if the authorities had the resources to import the commodity
amid crippling forex shortages or discuss the negative economic
effects of government’s plans to sell the fuel to farmers at a heavily
subsidized price of $11,000 per litre when the current market rate
ranges between $185,000 and $200,000.
Rather, it merely
reported "stakeholders" advising against
the abuse of fuel.
Earlier, in
a bid to paint a rosy picture of the ailing agricultural sector,
ZBH (10/4, 6pm & 8pm) claimed that the dairy farming, on the
decline since the inception of land invasions, was on a "recovery
path". This was despite the fact that farmers and experts
were quoted in the same bulletins belying this notion, complaining
about lack of funding, expertise and shortage of pastures, which
the "new farmers" had converted into crop
fields.
Similarly, The
Sunday Mail (16/4) would not provide coherent reasons behind
the sharp decline in the dairy herd from a peak of 104 483 cows
in 1994 to just 35 000 last year, which resulted in milk production
plummeting from 250 million litres to 97 million litres.
It only emphasised
that Dairibord Zimbabwe Holdings Limited would be importing 450
dairy cows from South Africa in a development that will considerably
"boost milk production in the country".
How this modest number of cows would improve the country’s milk
shortages, especially in a comparatively enlarged market than that
of the 1990s remained unsaid.
The government
Press’ determination to hide the truth also saw The Herald (10/4)
continue to hail the new maize producer price, presenting it as
the sole answer to numerous operational problems facing maize production.
It (13/4) then
tried to reinforce this projection when it reported Grain Marketing
Board boss Samuel Muvuti saying farmers had already started delivering
maize to the board’s depots "in response to"
the new price.
However, Muvuti
gave no figures to substantiate his claims and neither was he challenged
to do so. The paper only passively quoted him as saying the deliveries
had started "trickling in" and were expected
to reach a "peak" next mid-month.
The Sunday
Mail would also not explain how predictions that the country
would harvest 127 000 tonnes of cotton was arrived at. It only quoted
a cotton industry official simplistically arguing that the target
would be achieved "given the better rainfall" for
all the cotton-growing areas in the country. There was no investigation
on the adverse effects of the perpetual and severe shortages of
inputs that have been dogging the agricultural sector in the past
couple of years.
In fact, besides
simply portraying the authorities as "committed to increasing
agricultural production to achieve food security…and stop"
dependence on the international community (The Herald
11/4), the government papers also passively reported the authorities
discouraging independent assessments of agricultural production
in the country.
For example,
The Herald and Chronicle (12/4) seemed to show no
professional curiosity whatsoever about Agriculture Minister Joseph
Made’s warning against multilateral agencies who conducted "back
door crop assessment exercises" and issued "speculative
figures projecting crop harvests". Neither would they
ponder the real reasons behind his advice to rural communities and
Agricultural Research and Extension Services officials not to give
information to these agencies if indeed "the agricultural
season this year was better when compared to last year".
The government
media’s over dependence on official opinion to interpret problems
besetting farming is shown in Figs 1 and 2.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in government papers
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Business
|
Farmers
|
Zanu
PF
|
|
16
|
6
|
2
|
4
|
6
|
3
|
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Farmer
orgs.
|
Farmers
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Police
|
Zanu
PF
|
|
39
|
9
|
16
|
7
|
8
|
2
|
1
|
Except for the
Mirror stable, whose reports also largely lacked critical
analysis, the rest of the private media’s coverage of problems in
the agricultural sector was incisive.
They categorically
interpreted them as emanating from government’s chaotic land reforms,
its skewed agricultural policies and the erratic supply of inputs.
For instance,
The Financial Gazette (13/4), which reported on the pending
crop assessment next month by the multilateral Zimbabwe Vulnerability
Food Assessment, contested that government was becoming increasingly
"jittery" over the outcome of the crop assessments
following preliminary findings of the US Department of Agriculture
(USAD) that indicated "another staple grain deficit this
year despite above average rains".
The Standard
(16/4) also reported Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWSNET)
noting that though the projected harvest was better than last year’s,
it was "still below the 1990s average".
The organisation also revealed that the food situation had "deteriorated
significantly with rural households surviving on wild foods".
To make matters
worse, the Gazette revealed that despite such a gloomy picture,
some international food relief organisations were discontinuing
their humanitarian assistance in the country due to financial constraints.
It reported the World Food Programme (WFP) as winding up some of
its feeding programmes at the end of this month because it was US$22,2
million short of the US$151 million it needed to fund its operations
until June.
Earlier, The
Zimbabwe Independent (13/4) depicted the extent of Zimbabwe’s
seemingly untenable food situation in two stories that unmasked
more "waves of farm takeovers" and "looting"
of farm equipment by senior government officials and ruling party
supporters.
The private
radio stations carried similar issues in the three stories they
featured on the subject.
The private
media’s critical examination of problems bedevilling agriculture
and their attempts to balance official views with alternative ones
was reflected by the sourcing pattern of the private Press. See
Fig. 3.
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in private papers
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Business
|
Farmers
|
|
5
|
5
|
2
|
5
|
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