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Zim
admits promise of bumper harvest has failed
Mail
and Guardian (SA)
January 25, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/articlepage.aspx?area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/&articleid=330656&referrer=RSS
The realisation of promises
by the government of Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe of a record
crop yield during this summer's farming season will not be met,
the country's agriculture minister admitted on Friday.
In October, the government
declared that the summer would result in "the mother of all
agricultural seasons", which would reverse the record of poor
food production over the last five years, break the economic crisis
ravaging the country and restore economic prosperity.
"The season has
not been as spectacular as we had expected," Minister Rugare
Gumbo said in Friday's edition of the state-controlled Herald. He
admitted for the first time that the government had failed to supply
enough fertiliser to farmers, but also blamed heavy rains.
"I would like to
acknowledge the shortages of top-dressing fertilisers [applied later
in the season to grown plants]," he said, while the Herald
referred to "the little fertiliser" that had been used
when planting began at the start of the season.
Until 2000, Zimbabwe
was one of two African countries -- with South Africa -- that consistently
produced harvests that met domestic demand and surplus for export
to famine-stricken African countries.
However, international
agencies say that a violent campaign led by Mugabe of seizures of
land owned by the country's white commercial farmers wrecked the
agricultural industry and set off an economic collapse that includes
hyperinflation now estimated at about 50 000%.
Late last year, the government
launched a dramatic agricultural mechanisation plan that included
spending $25-million to import 1 000 new tractors as well as combine
harvesters and modern agricultural implements and overseeing the
local production of 50 000 ox-drawn ploughs and implements.
Gumbo also announced
that the government had "secured enough seed, fertiliser, agricultural
implements and fuel" to guarantee "massive output"
that would restore "our status as Southern Africa's breadbasket".
However, at the beginning
of the season, farmer organisations complained that fertiliser and
fuel were impossible to obtain, except for senior ruling-party bosses.
Seed companies said by mid-December, when most planting should have
been done, only 65% of the seed required had been distributed.
In recent weeks, allegations
of corruption have emerged in the country's Parliament over the
issue of contracts for the import of tractors, while human rights
agencies said two weeks ago that ruling-party officials were using
the ox-drawn ploughs as a bribe ahead of national elections due
in March, and distributing them only to farmers who could produce
ruling-party cards.
A report by the state
agricultural extension organisation, issued on Friday, cited widespread
"stunting" of the crop of maize -- the national staple
-- around the country because of insufficient fertiliser.
"The climate was
very unpredictable as we received more rains than we expected and
this ended up affecting agricultural production," Gumbo said.
He urged farmers to use traditional fertilisers - cattle dung and
the soil of anthills - instead of chemical fertilisers.
Every year since
2002, Western relief agencies have distributed food around the country
to avert widespread famine. The World Food Programme estimates that
four million people -- nearly half the population -- will need to
be fed in the next few months.
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