Zimbabwe goes hungry as crops wither amid El Nino drought

A wilted maize crop is seen in Mumijo, Buhera district east of the capital Harare, Zimbabwe, March 16, 2024. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo
Residents of
the Zimbabwean village of Buhera stood in groups at a primary school waiting to
be called by name to receive life-saving handouts of grain, peas and cooking
oil.
"We are
grateful, but the food will only be enough for one month," said Mushaikwa,
71, who lives with her elderly husband, as she trudged away with her bag of
grain. "My crops are wilted."
Zimbabwe has
failed to feed itself since 2000 when former president Robert Mugabe seized
white-owned farms, disrupting production and leading to sharp falls in output,
leaving many Zimbabweans reliant on food aid for survival.
The crisis has
been exacerbated by an El Nino-induced drought that has hit many southern
African nations. The government has estimated that 2.7 million people will go
hungry this year, although the real number could be higher.
The government
is considering whether to declare a state of emergency, a government minister
told Reuters.
El Nino is a
naturally occurring weather phenomenon associated with a disruption of wind
patterns that means warmer ocean surface temperatures in the eastern and
central Pacific.
It occurs on
average every two to seven years, typically lasts nine to 12 months and can
provoke extreme weather such as tropical cyclones, prolonged drought and
subsequent wildfires.
"When you
drive around, you will see that many crops have wilted," said World Food
Programme acting country director Christine Mendes in Buhera, about 220 km (140
miles) southeast of the capital, Harare.
Zimbabwe's
staple maize harvest is expected to halve to 1.1 million tons this year.
WFP has helped
270,000 people in four drought-prone districts between January and March but
will need additional funds to feed more, said Mendes.
In Buhera,
47-year-old Mary Takawira assessed her crop, which dried up before maturity.
"I do not
remember the taste of (corn) anymore," she said. "This is going to be
a tough year."
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