Zimbabwe - Chronic Food Shortages
Crisis - Hunger - Foraging for Food
Themba Hadebe/Associated
Press
A
Zimbabwean woman with her child on her back flees across the border into South Africa at Beitbridge Border Post. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/21/world/africa/21zimbabwe.html?_r=2&ref=world&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
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http://www.iwpr.net/?p=zim&s=f&o=346273&apc_state=henpzim
Hungry Zimbabweans Forage to Survive
ZANU-PF
officials reportedly compounding chronic food shortages by seizing grain
delivered to state depot.
By
Obert Gumpo in Gwanda (ZCR No. 160, 20-Aug-08)
Dumezweni
Nare does not remember any time in the past six months when he had a decent
meal.
“It is by the grace of the Lord that we are able to speak to you,” said Nare,
as he scavenged for wild fruit with a group of visibly hungry villagers in the
dry windswept veld a few kilometres outside Gwanda, the provincial capital of
Matabeleland South province.
Matabeleland South receives less than 450 millimetres of rainfall per year. At
best, it produces just enough food for its people to survive. The southern
provinces, while good for livestock rearing, are not suitable for agriculture.
A tour of the area by IWPR revealed that Nare was not alone in his predicament.
At dawn each day, the villagers of this dry and dusty region comb the
hinterlands in search of any wildlife or edible wild fruits, in a desperate
attempt to put food on the table.
The giant baobab trees that dot the terrain have become about the only source
of sustenance. The villagers go first for the fruit, the seeds of which are
coated in a white powder which separates from the pips when pounded in a
mortar.
Mixed with fresh milk, the powder produces a kind of cream of tartar. People
here have this for dinner, although most mix the powder with water instead.
But as the baobab fruit is finished quickly, villagers then go for the roots,
which are pounded into a porridge-like paste – known in local languages as
amagontsi or umtopi – which serves as their main meal.
As Zimbabwe's economic and political crisis continues, rural areas of the
country have been worst hit by severe food shortages and escalating prices.
According to recent statistics from the United Nations World Food Programme,
about 5.1 million Zimbabweans will be queuing up for food handouts by October
this year.
Nare, a peasant farmer from the Silonga community, said that children have been
unable to attend classes in most areas due to hunger.
According to Nare, villagers have not received any grain from the state-owned
Grain Marketing Board, GMB, for the past five months.
“But there are some people who have access to the GMB who come [and try to]
sell us maize at exorbitant prices,” he said.
“We are now surviving on umtopi. Alternatively, we engage in barter trade. A
big goat can get you two 20 kilogrammes of maize.”
However, 20 kg doesn’t last long and the villagers’ livestock is quickly being
depleted.
In Gwanda town, hungry residents who have not been given an opportunity to buy
maize from the GMB are also resorting to eating porridge prepared from baobab
fruits or ground roots.
They say that officials from the ruling ZANU-PF quickly snap up the little
grain that is delivered to the GMB’s main depot from South Africa and channel
it into the thriving black market.
“I have been coming here daily for a week and a half and they keep telling us
that wagons bringing maize from South Africa are coming today,” said Samuel
Nare, the only miller in the Manama area of Gwanda South.
“When a few do arrive, the grain is given to the same people, who seem to be
enjoying preferential treatment.
"The situation back at home is dire and our people are surviving on fruit
and roots like wild animals.”
Just outside the GMB depot, vendors could be seen selling a 20 kg bag of maize
meal for 40 Zimbabwe dollars, ZWD. This is out of the reach of most residents,
very few of whom earn more than 20 ZWD a month. Most locals are employed at
surrounding small-scale gold mines, which are currently in limbo because of the
country's ongoing economic crisis.
The situation in town is no better than in the remote countryside.
“Starvation is no longer confined to rural areas and it could be even worse
here in town,” said resident Nephat Ndlovu.
“Some households are now going for days without a full meal because they have
no access to the foreign currency [needed] to buy maize from the black market.”
In rural parts, councillors are allowed to collect grain from the GMB, which is
then sold to villagers in their respective wards.
But according to reports, ZANU-PF former councillors who lost their seats are
still allowed to take advantage of this arrangement, collecting grain from the
GMB and selling it on.
“Last week, a former ZANU-PF councillor from Enyandeni collected 200 bags from
the GMB and gave ten bags to each [ZANU-PF] official in the area for their own
consumption,” said Petros Mukwena, the provincial secretary for the Arthur
Mutambara-led faction of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC.
"When the new councillor went to collect maize for the ward, only 150
bags, which are hardly enough for the community, remained.
“I have since written to the governor, Angeline Masuku, to protest against this
corruption, which has become endemic, but I have not received a satisfactory
answer.”
Renson Gasela, the secretary for agriculture in the Mutambara MDC faction,
said, “There is no food. It is a fact that the rural population, especially in
southern Zimbabwe, is in dire straits. Some of us with rural constituencies are
afraid to visit some villages as people have not eaten for days.”
In some parts of the south he has visited recently, villagers were surviving on
wild fruit called matohwe and chakata, he said.
“People are eating anything wild that does not kill,” said Gasela, who is a
former head of the GMB.
According to Gasela, there is no good reason for the ongoing food shortages.
“There can never be an explanation as to why there is no food when the country
has the experience of mobilising and moving food into areas with acute
shortages. Someone is not doing his or her job for political reasons,” he said.
Leader of the main MDC faction Morgan Tsvangirai said the situation in rural
areas throughout the country was a cause of great concern for him and his
party. While Tsvangirai has been in negotiations with Mugabe to reach a
power-sharing deal, there is little sign that the men are close to an
agreement.
The MDC leader appealed to the mediator in the talks, South African president
Thabo Mbeki, to persuade Mugabe to allow humanitarian agencies to resume their
work, as millions of Zimbabweans face starvation. The agencies were banned from
distributing food in June this year.
“Zimbabwe has become one of the worst man-made humanitarian disasters of a new
and hopeful century. An estimated half-a-million Zimbabweans have already died
of starvation, malnutrition and preventable diseases,” said Tsvangirai.
“Because of the failed policies of ZANU-PF, more than five million now face
starvation and famine. We cannot allow this to happen.”