Wednesday, June 18, 2008
More
than 5 million Zimbabweans will suffer food insecurity in the next nine
months, a million people more than the previous year, the Food and
Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) said in
its crop assessment forecast released on 18 June.
"The Mission
estimates that 2.04 million people in rural and urban areas will be
food insecure between July and September 2008, rising to 3.8 million
people between October and peaking to about 5.1 million at the height
of the hungry season between January and March 2009," FAO/WFP Crop and Food Supply Assessment Mission (CFSAM) to Zimbabwe said.
Zimbabwe's
population is estimated at about 12 million people, but does not take
into account unofficial estimates that more than three million people
have left the country in recent years to escape economic and political
hardships.
The FAO/WFP report attributed the poor harvest to a
second consecutive year of "adverse weather, lack of timely
availability of [agricultural] inputs and severe economic constraints
in Zimbabwe [that)] have induced hardship and food insecurity among
both rural and urban populations."
The prospect of another
year of stressed food supplies comes amid severe political instability
that has seen widespread reports of violence, with more than 60 deaths
and the displacement of thousands since March and the run-up to voting
in the second round presidential poll on 27 June.
In the first
round election on 29 March, President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF lost
control of parliament for the first time since independence in 1980.
Mugabe was also second to the opposition's Movement for Democratic
Change leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, although neither candidate secured
the 50 percent plus one vote required for an outright first round win.
In
May, the government suspended humanitarian operations, including
feeding schemes, after it accused nongovernmental organisations (NGOs)
of "political activity."
World Vision's Vice President for the
Africa Region, Professor Wilfred Mlay, has appealed to the government
to permit delivery of basic humanitarian assistance by immediately
reversing its decision to suspend the operations of NGOs - who act as
the local partners of international aid agencies.
"As a
child-focused organisation, we are particularly concerned for the close
to 400,000 children we would have assisted this month through our
ongoing relief and development work. We hold grave concerns for the 1.6
million orphans and vulnerable children across the country who will now
not receive critical assistance from humanitarian agencies operating in
the country," Mlay said in a statement.
Decline of agriculture
The
FAO/WFP report said Zimbabwe produced about 575,000 tonnes from its
main maize harvest in 2008, "some 28 percent lower than the production
in 2007 (using the CFSAM estimate of 800,000mt) which in itself was
some 44 percent below 2006 government estimate."
"The Mission
estimates the total domestic cereal availability for 2008/09 marketing
year at 848,000mt, about 40 percent below last year’s domestic supply.
This includes a forecast production of winter wheat and additional
production of maize from winter/early, peri-urban/urban and seed
crops," the report said.
Since
2000, when Mugabe introduced the Fast Track Land Reform Programme,
which saw more than 4,000 white-owned commercial farms redistributed to
landless blacks, agricultural production has declined.
"The
newly settled farmers cultivate only about half of the prime land
allocated to them owing to shortages of tractor/draught power, fuel,
and investment in infrastructure/improvements, and absenteeism on the
part of some new settler beneficiaries. The large-scale commercial
sector now produces less than one-tenth of the maize that it produced
in the 1990s," the reports said.
However, commercial farmers
were not the dominant producers of maize; government price controls on
the staple saw large-scale farmers opt to produce cash crops, such as
tobacco and paprika, all part of a buoyant agriculture industry.
"The maize yields of the communal farmers
who used to produce the bulk of the crop in the country have also
reduced to one-fourth in about 10 years due to the loss of their
symbiotic relationship with former large scale commercial agricultural
sector and a demise of healthy agro-input industries.
"With
the total utilisation of cereals at about 2.080 million tonnes
including 1.875 million tonnes for direct human consumption for the
projected population of 11.865 million tonnes, the resulting cereal
import requirement is estimated at 1.232 million tonnes, of which the
maize deficit accounts for about one million tonnes," the report said.
The
maize shortfall comes on the back of Zimbabwe's economic meltdown,
which is seeing unofficial inflation rates of more than 1 million
percent, and shortages of fuel, electricity and foreign currency
commonplace.
"Given the acute shortage of foreign currency,
the dwindling export base, and high prices of maize in the region and
internationally, the Mission estimates that total commercial cereal
imports could be about 850,000mt, leaving an uncovered deficit of about
380,000mt of maize," the report said.
"The market availability
of cereals for households that have purchasing power will be crucial to
avoid more people becoming food insecure due to scarcity and higher
food prices that could result from such scarcity. In view of the
[state-owned] Grain Marketing Board's limited capacity, the Mission
further recommends that trading in cereals should be opened up to
private traders to ensure that cereals can be imported and moved
quickly to areas of need," the report said.
Source: IRIN NEWS http://irinnews.org