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Zimbabwe:
The politics of food
Renson
Minyekile Gasela
June 12, 2006
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/food24.14276.html
When we got
to second week of November 2005, without rain, I became increasingly
convinced that we were staring a 1991/92 scenario where it never
rained at all.
The skies were
showing my naked eyes, a similar situation. At that time the cicadas
were singing louder.
Their singing
caused me to wonder whether their noise was caused or motivated
by the scorching sun or they were announcing the imminent coming
of rain.
What I saw when
it started raining towards the later part of November, led me to
believe that there was a huge tangible difference between rain and
water. Rain brings life while water saves life. Two or so days after
it started raining, I saw so many flying insects attracted by light
at the farm.
Amongst these
insects was a very large black, long insect – maybe 12 cm long.
I really wondered where it had been. How suddenly it came to life
with the arrival of rain! Within the next few days, we cited no
less than seven snakes around the farm. The highlight of the snakes
was that on Monday, December 5, my wife Susan, while cleaning the
farm house, and re-arranging this and that, to her utter horror,
terror etc, there was a snake in a cardboard box, raising its head
and hissing at her. Susan’s fear of snakes is legendary. She will
scream and throw away a newspaper, book, just because there is a
picture of a snake! Here is a live one hissing at her. She nearly
fainted.
All throughout
the year, we irrigate one crop or another. There is water around
the farm. But there is no other life that is brought by the water
we use in the fields. Rain is life. Look at the transformation around
the country since the end of November. Rain makes grain. Because
the rainy season was delayed this year, the crops are generally
young. January is normally a very dry month. However, this year,
it has been extremely wet. It does appear now that we are going
to have an extremely good year as far as rainfall and its distribution
is concerned.
With such a
promising season, what prospects are there for sufficient food?
The young crop is already suffering from fertifilizer deficiency.
If ammonium nitrate was to be availed to the people now, a lot of
the crop could be saved. Even if fertilizer was to be found now,
there will not be enough food produced this year. The reasons for
continued food shortages are many and simple.
Seed production
is a long arduous and painstaking process that requires considerable
skill and experience. The process starts from embryo stage through
foundation to multiplication before such seed is released to seed
farmers to grow and make it available to farmers. This first stage
of seed production is very specialized. The process from embryo
to multiplication takes up to three years. Yes, we know that some
black farmers are now seed producers and during this period of their
gaining skill and experience, their yield is very low – an average
of two tones per ha instead of the normal average of five tones
per ha.
What the country
has not been told is whether we have these few farmers who produce
the first stage. If we no longer have them, then we are saddled
with a long term food deficit situation.
In the first
place local seed availability was only 30% of national requirement.
There was an appearance of over supply of seed because it was too
expensive. In short, not all the 30% of seed available was bought
because of cost. Many small farmers bought what may end up producing
enough food only for their families.
The second factor
is the perennial shortage of fertilizers. With so much rain and
many of the farmers in sandy soils, there is already great need
for top dressing fertilisers.
The third factor
is tillage. I witnessed a very embarrassing scene in Gweru on Tuesday
20th December 2005 at the AREX offices. For one of the few times
since the start of the season, there was farmers’ diesel available.
Hundreds of
farmers went to queue for allocations. As Arex staff was serving
farmers on a first come first saved basis, senior army, police and
Zanu PF officials were jumping the queue resulting in a riotous
situation where police had to send dogs to restore order. The point
here is that government is selling fuel to these farmers at the
end of the ploughing season. The majority of these farmers do not
have their own tractors but would hire any available tractor and
use their diesel. Whether that actually happens is an academic point
for this paper.
The purpose
of this paper is not to prove that there will not be enough food
next season. I have just mentioned the factors contributing to food
shortage. The purpose of this short paper is to show and prove that
it is a grand design or scheme of Zanu PF and its government that
Zimbabweans are pliable and controllable under food shortage situation.
Zanu PF as a party has destroyed the economy of this country.
Only people
who have direct benefit from its largesse can continue to vote for
it. It must continue to stay in power at any cost. Zanu PF, using
councillors and village heads, will force people starved of food
in the rural areas to comply.
The Zanu PF
government knows that it can never win a free and fair election.
The country has one election or another every year. We had parliamentary
and senatorial elections in 2005. This year in about September there
will be rural district council elections. Visit any GMB depot and
see how rural district councillors are there daily either coming
to get mealie meal, seed or fertilisers, which products are sold
to Zanu PF card holders only. The campaign for RDC’s has already
started. Next year there will be elections for the urban councils.
In 2008, there will be presidential elections. It is therefore the
permanent interest of government, ZANU PF and the state to be in
full control of the people. There is a perfect goal congruency in
these institutions.
My point is
that it is deliberate policy to keep Zimbabwe in semi permanent
food deficit situation and my reasons are as follows:
a) Land
Reform
While the need for land reform in acceptable as a means of resolving
the land question, the manner in which it was done was clearly never
intended to solve the land question. One only needs to look at the
beneficiaries to see what its intentions ultimately became. There
is land audit after land audit. Those who own multiple farms are
not touched. There are millions of hectares lying fallow.
b) Inputs
The parliamentary portfolio committee on Lands and Agriculture
in 2003 made specific recommendations on how to deal with the inputs
crisis, having had evidence from stakeholders. When the report and
recommendations were presented to parliament, Minister Made specifically
rejected both report and recommendations. See Hansard of 17th December
2003 Columns 2140-2142. Last year 2005, the same portfolio committee
came up with the same findings and made nearly similar recommendations.
Again, these have not been accepted.
In his closing
remarks at Esigodini as reported by Sunday Mail of 11th December
2005, President Mugabe said: "It's clear we still have
serious bottlenecks in the system of procuring and supplying inputs
to our people now on the land. I have a few questions to ask my
minister on that, a few issues to take up with my Minister on that.
Seasons are not predictable in their occurrence. We know every year
there is going to be an agricultural season. Yet year in, year out,
we are caught flat-footed and unprepared. The farmer prepares for
the season diligently, only to be failed by the various arms of
government, which must move in with inputs.
"There
are serious shortcomings in Government Planning and steps will have
to be taken to correct that. Does it make sense that we do not have
enough fertilizer at this point in the season? We have been talking
about shortages since last year. Cabinet will have to deal with
this matter in two days’ time."
Can we really
believe that President Mugabe does not know why there is no fertilizer?
Can we really believe that he has over the past five years actually
failed to ensure that his Ministers perform? Did Cabinet meet in
two days and if so, what solutions this late hour did they come
up with? The questions are many but they have none to answer.
c) Operation
Taguta
Over the past nine months, we have had Operation Murambatsvina,
Operation Garikai/Hlalani Kuhle and Operation Taguta. There have
been many other operations in the past few years. Who needs further
proof that Zimbabwe has been completely militarised? More able people
can write about the militarization but for me, I want to comment
on Operation Taguta.
Having recognized
the failure of the land reform programme, the government decided
late last year to mount Operation Taguta. This is the army going
into the underutilized farms and literally taking them over by tilling
the land and putting in some crops.
Operation Taguta
is trying to plant maize even as late as now. When did the regime
discover that land was underutilized? Is the army the right vehicle
for food production? Are not some of the military people also failing
in their individual capacities to produce food? Is this not an admission
of the failure of land reform?
We understand
that the army has thousands of tonnes of Ammonium Nitrate Fertilizer
for Operation Taguta. Since it is so late now to begin ploughing
and planting any crops why not release the fertilizer and save the
crop on the ground?
To complete
their goal, the government now wants to spend $1.5 trillion dollars
buying the shares of fertilizer companies.
All the fertilizer
companies are operating at below capacity due to shortage of foreign
currency which the government should provide if they were serious
about agriculture. It would appear that the government is deliberately
sabotaging the fertilizer companies by failing or refusing to provide
them with foreign currency. If this is not so, where are they going
to get the foreign currency after nationalization? One can only
conclude that the whole idea is the perfection of the patronage
system when they are in full control.
d) Food
Aid
The
government was fully aware that their pipe dream of 2.4 million
tonnes of maize in 2004 was not there. Last year the rains were
poor. Even as they claimed they had too much maize, they never stopped
imports, during that big surplus year! Zimbabwe has been eating
secretly imported maize over the past 24 months. However, when it
was obvious to everybody that people were starving the government
refused food aid. When the City of Bulawayo was reporting starvation
related deaths, Minister Chombo investigated the City Council instead
of causes of those deaths.
The regime eventually
accepted food aid at the end of the year, after much suffering of
the people. The people are still suffering as there is no mealie
meal to be found.
e) Operation
Murambatsvina
The government found a formula of controlling people in the
rural areas. This is done through the system of Wadco and Vidco.
Each Wadco or Ward, has a Zanu PF employee who is paid by government
through Ministry of Youth. This official works with village heads
and ward councillor. With perennial induced food shortage, this
structure ensures compliance of rural people. The patronage system
has been perfected.
In the urban
areas, the people are much freer and make their own decisions. The
hundreds of thousands of informal traders were self sufficient and
therefore did not look upon the state to do anything for them.
Their lack
of dependence meant that government could not control them as those
in rural areas.
In order to
bring control, Operation
Murambatsvina was conceived and implemented with unparrelled
ruthlessness. Hundreds of thousands of victims were sent to the
communal areas where they are now controllable and controlled.
In conclusion,
this is a perfect example of goal congruency by the state as led
by Zanu PF. No one can convince me that the government is willing
but is unable to plan properly and get the country out of the food
shortage and back to its glory of being the breadbasket of the region.
Control the people by starving them and stay in power. This can
only be done by an evil party which believes that it is the only
one which has divine authority and right to rule this country forever.
The time has come for the people to say enough is enough.
*Renson
Minyekile Gasela is shadow Agriculture Secretary for the opposition
MDC and the former MDC MP for Gweru Rural
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