s of people are going hungry not, as Mugabe’s government claims, because of poor rains but as a direct result of policies drafted by the JOC of denying food to opposition supporters and enriching its loyalists.
An elaborate plan hatched by the JOC to ban food imports, which has been reversed after being shamelessly exposed, forms part of this broad plan.
Top security officials told The Zimbabwean that control of the Grain Marketing Board (GMB), Zimbabwe’s state-owned monopoly supplier of commercial maize, has been passed to one of Mugabe’s most loyal henchmen, Air Marshal Perence Shiri, an alleged war criminal.
Shiri, who sits in the JOC together with other generals, two weeks ago appointed a new board at the GMB to oversee the elaborate strategy.
With Zimbabwe’s economy in chaos, sources alleged Shiri’s mission was to spend a £17million loan provided by Libya buying just enough maize to stave off food riots, which would then be supplied through the GMB.
The organisation, which is meant to supply maize at subsidised prices to all Zimbabweans, has instead been selling desperately short maize only to supporters of the ruling Zanu (PF) party. Backers of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change went hungry.
Worse still was the country’s Food For Work programme. Thousands of opposition supporters would provide 15 days’ labour only to be told at the end there was no GMB food for them.
The GMB is so corrupt and politicised that aid groups shipping food into Zimbabwe are being forced to set up their own expensive parallel storage and distribution facilities, rather than using those of the GMB.
There is also evidence that the Zimbabwean government, through the JOC, is deliberately blocking the work of these international aid groups and keeping the flow of aid down to a trickle.
That trickle is enough to stave off threats of public unrest, but not enough to provide food for all of the country. Last month an aid consignment was seized in Masvingo.
“What we are seeing is nothing but humanitarian torture,” an aid worker said. “It takes three months to die of starvation and this is a torture every bit as bad as beating someone with barbed wire or hanging them from handcuffs.”
Post published in: News


