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Harvest
time in Zimbabwe, refugees help themselves
United
Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
February
19, 2007
http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/45d966394.html
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| In
Tongogara camp in Zimbabwe, Siri Kirogi, a 16-year-old refugee
from DRC cares for the family plot in an agricultural project
designed to supplement the diets of refugees and make them more
self-sufficient. © UNHCR/J.Redden |
TONGOGARA
REFUGEE CAMP, Zimbabwe - Siri Kirogi moved through the tall
stalks, pulling weeds from the irrigation channels and filling a
sack with ripe ears of maize.
Although only
16 years old, Siri and her younger brother are caring for the plot
assigned to their family at Tongogora Refugee Camp when not attending
school. She also grows vegetables in a small garden beside their
home in the camp.
Siri arrived
at the camp in 2004, a refugee fleeing the violence in her native
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). She was accompanied by three
brothers, including the eldest who is now 20. In the jargon of the
UN refugee agency, they were unaccompanied minors; to most people
they were simply orphans whose parents had been killed in the DRC's
wars.
The plot in
the field and the vegetable garden are far from enough to feed the
four young refugees but they do provide a vital supplement. Rations
were reduced at Zimbabwe's only refugee camp during the last year,
although they still meet the daily requirement of 2,100 Kcal.
That was not
just an economy measure. As in other countries, UNHCR is pursuing
a policy of making long-time refugees as self-reliant as possible
- providing essential aid but ensuring it does not create
a culture of dependency.
"This field
is important because there is no other source of food but a vegetable
patch and the rations," Siri said as she adjusted the plastic
pipes the refugees use to siphon water into the field from concrete-lined
ditches.
The 2,100 refugees
at the camp in eastern Zimbabwe are almost all from the Great Lakes
area - DRC, Rwanda and Burundi - and show little enthusiasm
for returning home. The 20 hectares of maize that are now being
harvested provide a welcome supplement to their diet. Most of the
fields will be planted next with beans.
A further 40
hectares is available but will require extra investment. The land,
located in one of the driest areas of Zimbabwe and with poor sandy
soil, depends on irrigation water brought from a river 15 kilometres
away.
It was given
for the use of refugees when Tongogara was first established in
the 1970s to house refugees fleeing the civil war in Mozambique,
just over the eastern border. The camp was later closed but reopened
in 1997 to house refugees driven out of the Great Lakes area.
The refugees
have been using the fields on the outskirts of the refugee camp
for several years but UNHCR, through its local partner World Vision,
decided a year ago to focus on improving agriculture. After receiving
expert advice to develop the fields and improve agricultural skills,
the refugees said yields this year have soared.
"I was
a tailor but now there's no work for me," said Bizimungu Dieudonne,
who arrived in 2003 from Burundi and was carrying a sack of maize
on the back of his bicycle. "There is no option. That is why
I am doing this. We have finished growing maize and the manager
says there will be a meeting to discuss what we grow next."
Each family
gets a plot of 0.08 hectare - enough to grow about 80 kg of
maize. Dieudonne said it would enhance the diet of his five children
for the next two months. About 250 of the 650 family units in the
camp have plots and more would like to participate. Eight local
Zimbabwean families have been included, reducing potential tension.
However, while the area under cultivation can be increased somewhat,
refugees will continue to need rations.
"Zimbabwe
is a very small country and demand for land is very high. The opportunities
for refugees are very limited. Those who want to do agriculture
will not get enough land," said Tapiwa Huye, a field officer
with World Vision. "But the population of refugees has now
seen the value of agriculture. They had feared it was a way to get
them off of rations but now many want to join the project."
The economic
problems in Zimbabwe and sensitivity over land present formidable
obstacles to full local integration of refugees. A few refugees
each year are resettled to third countries like Canada, Australia
and the United States. UNHCR wants the remainder to be as self-sufficient
as possible while awaiting a lasting solution.
"The farm
plots don't end the problem. But at least they can supplement their
rations," said Jennifer Msimbo, a UNHCR community services
assistant who lives at the camp and recognises the danger of dependence
on handouts. "And in the long-run the refugees are expected
to go back home."
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