NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Declare drought a national disaster: MP

- BY SILAS NKALA/PATRICIA SIBANDA

OPPOSITION Nkayi South Member of Parliament, Jabulani Hadebe, has called on government to declare the looming drought a national disaster to prevent hungerrela­ted deaths.

Hadebe said this would attract more humanitari­an interventi­ons from the internatio­nal community and other donor agencies to save lives.

He made the remarks during a virtual discussion organised by Nkayi Community Parliament, a replica of the National Assembly.

According to food monitoring agencies, at least four million Zimbabwean­s face hunger as a result of the El Niño-induced drought.

A number of countries in southern Africa have not been spared by the drought, with Zambia recently suspending grain exports to save available stocks for its people.

“This drought issue must be taken seriously,” Hadebe said during his contributi­on.

“I am going to push the government through Parliament to declare the 2023-24 farming season a national disaster so that we start now to look for those who can assist us so that we save people from starvation.”

On Tuesday, the Grain Millers Associatio­n of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) told Parliament that it will import one million tonnes of grain to supplement available stocks.

Government has said no one will starve, but critics insist that authoritie­s cannot be trusted, having been exposed before for lying about the hunger situation and available grain stocks.

In the past, food aid distributi­on programmes have been hijacked and politicise­d by suspected Zanu PF members and officials.

A member of the Nkayi Community Parliament, Collen Moyo, urged the government to start documentin­g people that may need food aid to prevent hungerrela­ted deaths.

“There are several ways to prevent the misuse of donated food, and one is to ensure that there is strong oversight and accountabi­lity in the distributi­on process. This can be done by having a clear system for monitoring the distributi­on of food and ensuring that it reaches the intended beneficiar­ies,” he said.

Meanwhile, retailers have increased the price of mealie-meal with a 10kg bag now going for US$8 up from between US$5 and US$6.

Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Retailers president Denford Mutashu said retailers were ripping off customers.

“Mealie-meal is a key staple commodity, hence millers and distributi­on chains should not only ensure it is available, but priced for affordabil­ity. Retailers and wholesaler­s should not take advantage of the impending El Niño-induced drought to profiteer on the product or any other key basic goods,” Mutashu said.

GMAZ chairperso­n Tafadzwa Musarara said mealie-meal had been in short supply.

“When a product is in short supply, there is a tendency that the price of that product will go up,” Musarara said.

“Mismatch in foreign currency rates official versus black market rates is the major issue, with increases on service delivery rates, tollgate fees, electricit­y costs, VAT [value-added tax] and other taxes imposed having had an impact on pricing as producers, retailers all pass on costs to final end users of products, who bear the burden albeit of low income.”

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