Hunger Crisis Deepens in Africa |
The number of
Zimbabweans requiring food aid has risen from 3 million to 4 million as
the southern African nation struggles with its worst drought in more
than two decades. Public Service, Labor and Social Welfare Minister,
Prisca Mupfumira, told the Herald newspaper that the authorities were
speeding up grain imports to ensure that no one starves. "Indications
are that the figure of vulnerable households requiring food assistance
could be as high as four million people," she said.
A committee
comprised of UN agencies, government officials, and NGO activists, last
year concluded that 1.5 million needed food aid. They also appealed for
$1.6 billion (1.5 billion euros) in aid to help pay for grain and other
food. Mupfumira said government stocks of maize, the staple food, were
91,326 metric tones as of March 10 - enough to last three months but
drought may stretch until next year.
The Zimbabwean
official did not give details of stocks held by private millers and
farmers whom the government allowed to import grain. The drought and low
mineral commodity prices have also taken their toll on the economy;
with Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa saying last week that Zimbabwe
was "under siege". Farmers have already lost cattle and crops and fear
more distress as the year progresses.
Children affected
The UN's children's
agency (UNICEF) says Zimbabwe is facing its worst malnutrition rates in
15 years due partly to drought caused by the El Nino phenomenon. UNICEF
spokesman Christophe Boulierac told reporters in Geneva that 33,000
children in Zimbabwe mostly aged one to two were urgently in need of
treatment for "severe acute malnutrition." Severe acute malnutrition is
extreme hunger causing visible wasting and fluid retention.
Boulierac said
Tuesday (15.03.2016) that the number of hungry families has doubled in
the last 8 months, and UNICEF was appealing for $21million in support to
meet the humanitarian needs in Zimbabwe this year. "We have not seen
these levels of malnutrition in more than 15 years and more needs to be
done to prevent this crisis from spiraling out of control," UNICEF
representative Jane Muita said in a statement. "Water scarcity is also
exposing children to higher risks of diarrhea, typhoid and other
waterborne diseases including cholera," Muita added.
Some families are
saving dwindling stocks by skipping meals, while school children are
missing classes due to hunger, according to local media reports. In
addition to the effects of severe drought, Zimbabwe has suffered
perennial grain shortages after land reforms under which commercial
farms owned by whites were redistributed to landless blacks.
African countries in the red zone
The latest report
released by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) says 34
countries around the world need food assistance due to droughts,
flooding and ongoing conflicts. Among those countries, 27 are located in
Africa. That report notes that the regions most in need of humanitarian
support are eastern and southern Africa.
In Southern Africa, 49 million there face hunger this year due to drought exacerbated by an El Nino weather pattern.
Food security
analyst, Neema Mogha, says the El Nino induced drought is not the only
cause of food shortages in many African countries.
"El Nino is of
course the main contributing factor to food shortages in Zimbabwe and
other countries in the Sub-Saharan region, but there are also other
issues of land mismanagement and over population which contribute to
land degradation," Neema told DW.
The United Nations
World Food Programme (WFP) says at least 17 percent of Malawians are
affected. Prices for maize, the nation's staple crop, are already more
than 60 percent above the 3-year average for this time of the year,
making it increasingly difficult for many people to buy food.
The WFP says the
inflation rate in the region is at 23.5 percent and its currency is on
average 170 percent higher than its exchange rate against the US dollar
compared to the same period last year. According to a report by the
Malawi Vulnerability Assessment Committee, it is estimated that about
2.8 million people in the country are in need of food aid following last
season's dry spell and floods.
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