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Asking
for more humanitarian money
IRIN
News
August
04, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90069
"Economic and political
challenges" combined with underfunded recovery and development
are keeping Zimbabwe in a seemingly perpetual state of humanitarian
need, aid agencies said to justify an upward revision of US$100
million in projected funding requirements.
"We now require
at least $478 million as a result of the dry spell that affected
crops between December and February this year," said Alain
Noudehou, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Zimbabwe, who launched
a revised version of the Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP) - the
humanitarian community's most important fundraising instrument -
on 3 August in the Capital, Harare, after a mid-year review of needs.
Food aid constituted
the bulk of new requirements. At the beginning of 2010 the food
component shot up from $59 million to $138 million, but recent assessments
identified gaps in health and agriculture, which meant the originally
projected total budget of $378 million fell short by some 20 percent.
The revised CAP document
said Zimbabwe was at a crossroads, and the humanitarian situation
"remains fragile due to the prevailing degradation of infrastructure
in the basic sectors of health, water and sanitation, and food security".
Improved food production
compared to 2008/09 was attributed to "timely agricultural
inputs and extension support provided by humanitarian partners during
the 2009/10 planting season", but food insecurity persisted;
rates of chronic malnutrition stood at 35 percent.
Some 540,000 people currently
require food aid, but this is expected to rise to 1.3 million during
the peak of the hunger season, from January to March 2011. Around
4.5 million people have limited or no access to safe water and sanitation
in rural and urban areas.
Beyond
humanitarian
The CAP is a strictly
"humanitarian" financing tool, traditionally restricted
to short-term emergency needs. However, it does not preclude support
to communities requiring emergency early recovery so as to strengthen
coping mechanisms and sustain livelihoods - a grey area between
humanitarian and development operations.
"While some early
recovery activities are ongoing as part of humanitarian actions,
the lack of major funding for recovery and development remains one
of the key hindrances to moving the country out of a situation of
generalized humanitarian need," the document said.
"Zimbabwe requires
a different approach than most crises," it noted. "Small
emergencies continue to develop into major crises requiring relief
assistance, due to the unaddressed structural degradation in the
basic sectors. With strong infrastructure in place, and with the
right level and mix of support, Zimbabwe would have the capacity
to rebound faster than most countries in crises."
The CAP highlighted recent
examples to prove the benefits of a more comprehensive approach,
pointing out that the rehabilitation of rural and urban water supply
infrastructure, as part of the fight against communicable diseases
like cholera and typhoid, had prevented a repeat in 2010 of the
colossal cholera outbreak in 2008/09.
"The root causes
of the large-scale measles outbreak that started in September 2009
have been addressed through a nationwide measles vaccination campaign,
an activity that would normally not fall under the umbrella of humanitarian
assistance."
Asking for money is one
thing; getting donors to pay up is another. CAPs are notoriously
underfunded; as of 4 August, commitments to Zimbabwe's 2010 CAP
covered less than 42 percent of the requested amount.
Beyond
aid
Tadeous Chifamba, Permanent
Secretary for Regional Integration and International Cooperation,
stressed the need for Zimbabwe to become less dependent on international
aid and promote sustainable development programmes.
"Food handouts will
still be extended to vulnerable populations, such as the elderly,
chronically ill, and child-headed households ... [but] we call on
our humanitarian community to follow government's call to wean people
away from dependency syndrome," he said.
This is not an easy task,
and one that will require interventions well beyond the traditional
humanitarian mandate, former President of the Zimbabwe Commercial
Farmers' Union, Davidson Mugabe, told IRIN.
"What needs to happen
is a multi-pronged approach, in which the Agricultural Bank is adequately
financed by the government in order to be able to service the needs
of farmers - such as fertilisers, chemicals and other inputs ...
That, and nationwide training on the basics of agriculture, would
see food security improving."
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