Announcing the Consolidated Appeal Process (CAP) for 2011, the UNs
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said
Zimbabwes humanitarian situation remained precarious despite two
years of modest economic recovery.
It said unresolved problems in the agriculture sector would mean
millions of Zimbabweans would continue to face hunger next year. Food
assistance would chew up the largest chunk of the appeal, accounting
for nearly US159 million or 38 percent of the total amount sought.
An estimated 1.7 million Zimbabweans are expected to face severe food
insecurity in the peak hunger period between January and March 2011
when farmers start harvesting crops from the 2010/11 season.
But due to problems besetting the agricultural sector, there is no
guarantee that the new season would produce enough food to meet the
countrys requirements through the 2011/12 consumption year that runs
between next April and March 2012.
Ongoing farm seizures by President Robert Mugabes supporters have
frustrated the remaining large-scale white growers.
A unity government formed by Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai in February 2009 has watched helplessly as members of the
security forces and hardliner activists of Mugabes Zanu (PF) party
intensified in recent weeks a drive to seize all land still in white
hands.
The coalition government is yet to act to fulfil a promise to restore
law and order in the key agricultural sector, while more farms
including some owned by foreigners and protected under bilateral
investment protection agreements between Zimbabwe and other nations
have been seized over the past 21 months.
And to make matters worse, according to the white-dominated Commercial
Farmers Union, police and judicial officers who are supposed to
enforce the rule of law were also among the beneficiaries of the
free-for-all land grab.
Post published in: News


HARARE The United Nations has launched a US$415 million humanitarian