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Zimbabwe -- Young girls married off for food
SAPA-AFP via News24 (SA) ^ | June 30, 2002

Posted on 06/30/2002 2:23:57 PM PDT by Clive

Harare - Long lines of people waiting for corn meal snake through the streets of a nation that was once the breadbasket of southern Africa. Some wait for days, sleeping in lines so they won't lose their place.

Girls 13 and under are being married off for the bride price to buy expensive black-market food. Many people are getting one meal a day.

And Zimbabwe's hunger crisis is sure to get worse.

Drought, a crashing economy and a land reform program that has destroyed commercial farming have pushed millions of Zimbabweans to the brink of starvation.

Five other southern African countries are also facing severe hunger this year, but Zimbabwe is by far the worst off.

WFP

The UN World Food Programme says nearly half of its 13 million people will need food aid. A country that used to export food to hungry neighbours will need to import a staggering 1.98 tons of grain just to get through the year.

"This is unprecedented," said Andrew Timpson of Save the Children UK. "We're very worried indeed."

The harvest has just ended, and already the country is running out of maize, the staple food. It is about to use the last of its wheat, and supplies of cooking oil and animal feed are dwindling.

With no hard currency reserves and an economy shredded by political unrest, the government will almost certainly be unable to import enough grain to feed its people, even with hundreds of thousands of tons of donated food, economists and aid workers said.

Farmland lying fallow

Meanwhile, much of Zimbabwe's most productive farmland lies fallow as the government continues its efforts to seize nearly all the land owned by the nation's white commercial farmers, by far Zimbabwe's most productive food producers, and redistribute it to landless blacks.

The government says it is rectifying a hated legacy of British colonial rule. But human rights activists accuse it of using the seizures to reward its supporters with land while punishing white farmers and their hundreds of thousands of farmworkers, who are seen as opposition stalwarts.

'Hunger used as weapon'

The government is also accused of using hunger as a weapon, shipping state-subsidised grain only to strongholds of President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party.

In some areas, people must show party membership cards to get food; in others, food is distributed at ruling party meetings, said Tawanda Hondora, chairperson of Zimbabwe's Human Rights Forum.

On at least one occasion, ruling party militants temporarily prevented Zimbabwe's Roman Catholic Justice and Peace Commission from feeding hungry children and pregnant women.

"They wanted to do the distributions themselves," said Tarcisius Zimbiti, the commission's acting director.

Zimbabweans increasingly have to buy maize on the black market for two to three times the price of state-subsidised maize in a country with 60 percent unemployment and 122 percent annual inflation.

"It is too tough to survive," said William Marimo (39), who lives in the rural slum of Porta Farm, 32km west of Harare, the capital.

Land seizures

A three-month drought at a crucial phase of the growing season is mainly to blame. But even Zimbabwean officials acknowledge the land seizures made things worse.

"It compounds, it exacerbates, but it is not the primary cause of the problem," Finance Minister Simba Makoni said.

Zimbabwe produced only about 528 000 tons of maize this year, about a fourth of what it grew two years ago.

Commercial farmers brought in 935 000 tons of that 2000 harvest on 160 000 hectares.

This year, they planted about 40% of that area, harvesting only 203 940 tons.

Winter wheat

The winter wheat on what remains of Vernon Nicolle's farm is about knee- high now, right where it should be despite the weather, thanks to high-tech irrigation.

On nearby land his family used to own, there is nothing but weeds, he said.

Until recently, Nicolle (58) and his extended family produced one-quarter of Zimbabwe's wheat crop on their 12 huge farms.

Nine of those farms are gone now, seized by the government, and parts of the remaining three are occupied by armed ruling party militants and inaccessible to the farmers.

The Nicolle family was able to farm winter wheat on only one-fifth of the land it used to cultivate. Some of the settlers and militants on the other land planted wheat, but didn't irrigate it, Nicolle said. Those seeds have not even sprouted.

With their experience, expensive irrigation equipment, fertilisers and pesticides, commercial farmers generally coax about five times more food out of an acre than small-scale farmers, food experts say. During this year's drought, they were 10 times more productive than small-scale farmers.

Experts predict this year's winter wheat crop will at best total only 165 000 tons, less than half the normal harvest. But that was before the government ordered nearly all white farmers to stop working their fields by June 24 - regardless of whether crops were already planted - and prepare to leave their houses.

Government officials did not return messages seeking comment.

Land policy But they have defended their land policies, saying that after two decades of independence, many Zimbabweans were frustrated that whites, less than 1% of the population, controlled the country's wealth, and that about 4 500 white commercial farmers owned one-third of the nation's farmland while 7m black farmers shared the rest.

After encouraging ruling party militants to occupy many of the commercial farms two years ago, Mugabe's government targeted 95% of white-owned farmland for rapid seizure and redistribution.

Severe food shortages

Zimbabwe has suffered severe food shortages before.

In 1992, the worst drought in a century ravaged nearly its entire harvest. But it had a massive food surplus from the previous year, cash to import food and good relations with donor countries.

This time there's no surplus. The three top hard currency earners have been badly weakened: tobacco farming by the land seizures, tourism by the political instability and gold mining by an absurdly low fixed currency exchange rate.

Key donor countries are incensed at government-inspired political violence, Mugabe's land policies and his re-election in March in a ballot that many international and domestic observers judged flawed.

The government has also created a grain monopoly. If it doesn't let private companies import grain, "the situation could go from bad to catastrophic," said Judith Lewis, regional director of the World Food Programme.

At Porta Farm and elsewhere, no subsidised maize is on sale, and people are struggling.

Hungry children fall asleep in school, or drop out because their families can no longer afford the fees.

'Soon I will have to sell the bed'

Naki Bhilias (57) worked on a nearby farm until it was occupied last year. Now she follows combines through the fields of the few remaining farms gleaning scraps for herself and her husband.

Two years ago, Porta Farm housed about 8 000 families, most farm labourers. It has since swelled to 12 000 families, many new arrivals having been expelled from farms where they lived and worked.

The workers have resorted to poaching fish from a river in a nearby national park and selling them at the roadside.

Since losing his 16-year job on a farm last year, Emmanuel Panganayi has been forced to illegally collect and sell firewood from the park to feed his wife and two children.

When that was not enough, he sold off his four chairs to buy a few days' worth of black-market maize meal. Now he has little left to sell.

"I don't make enough money and things are getting very expensive," he said. "I will end up selling the bed." - Sapa-AP


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: africawatch; zimbabwe

1 posted on 06/30/2002 2:23:57 PM PDT by Clive
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To: *AfricaWatch; Cincinatus' Wife; sarcasm; Travis McGee; Byron_the_Aussie; robnoel; GeronL; ZOOKER; ..
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2 posted on 06/30/2002 2:24:34 PM PDT by Clive
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To: Clive
Waddya know, It's the 21st century and Stalinism is alive and well. Terror famines were a popular technique of opression among Stalinists in the century for grinding up the social institutions and economies of countries to prepare them for Authoritarian domination. Unfortunately I think Zimbabwe will end in a big disaster in typical African style because I don't think Mugabe is competent enough to administer a police state.
3 posted on 06/30/2002 2:32:42 PM PDT by Odyssey-x
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To: Clive
,,, there's enough fuel left to run Mugabe's Benz 600 though.
4 posted on 06/30/2002 2:33:00 PM PDT by shaggy eel
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To: Clive
I'll add this one to the email I'm working up. Sometimes it seems like they are "all-Africa News" but that can't be helped.

The "media" in this country are complicitly silent about it.

5 posted on 06/30/2002 2:36:37 PM PDT by backhoe
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To: Odyssey-x
Oh yes the word "Unfortunately" used above is used because really, there is no fortunately. Perhaps "Fortunately" would be Vietnam where people endure 30 years of grinding poverty and a war for nothing. Unfortunately would be Cambodia or Ethiopia where the leaders are insane and massive famines and genocides leave the whole country destroyed and shell shocked for decades.
6 posted on 06/30/2002 2:37:02 PM PDT by Odyssey-x
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To: sistergoldenhair
ping
7 posted on 06/30/2002 2:47:08 PM PDT by facedown
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To: Clive
the government continues its efforts to seize nearly all the land owned by the nation's white commercial farmers, by far Zimbabwe's most productive food producers, and redistribute it to landless blacks.

How much do you want to bet that when CNN starts running stories about starving Zimbabweans, they omit this uncomfortable little fact.

8 posted on 06/30/2002 3:00:44 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Clive
Young girls married off for food

Do the young ones taste any better than the old ones? The old ones are OK but they tend to be sort of gamey.

9 posted on 06/30/2002 3:04:10 PM PDT by AAABEST
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To: Clive
NOT reported in The Boston Globe, the New York Times, and the rest of the Marxist Mainstream press. Can't admit that the Glorious Peoples' Revolution leaves only death and horror in its wake...

Socialists would rather starve people to death than admit their ideology is a monstrous scam aimed at enriching only themselves...

10 posted on 06/30/2002 3:05:23 PM PDT by pabianice
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To: Clive
Another African success story. We are seeing an entire continent plunged into ruin through a stupidity, greed, incompetence, ignorance, and evil unparalleled in any other part of the world in any other time.

But we dare not say so lest we be called racists...

11 posted on 06/30/2002 3:33:43 PM PDT by pabianice
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