Zimbabwe facing ‘man-made’ starvation, UN expert warns
'By the end of this year... an estimated eight million people [will] require urgent action to save livelihoods,' said Hilal Elver, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food.
(FILES) In this file photo taken on March 13, 2019 Future Nyamukondiwa inspects a stunted cob in her dry maize field on March 13, 2019, in the Mutoko rural area of Zimbabwe. Picture: Jekesai NJIKIZANA / AFP
Zimbabwe is facing “man-made” starvation with 60 percent of the people failing to meet basic food needs, a UN special envoy said on Thursday after touring the southern African country.
Hilal Elver, Special Rapporteur on the right to food, ranked Zimbabwe among the four top countries facing severe food shortages outside nations in conflict zones.
“The people of Zimbabwe are slowly getting to a point of suffering a man-made starvation,” she told a news conference in Harare, adding that eight million people would be affected by the end of the year.
“Today, Zimbabwe counts amongst the four highest food insecure states,” she said after an 11-day tour, adding that poor harvests were compounded by 490 percent hyperinflation.
“A staggering 5.5 million people are currently facing food insecurity” in rural areas due to a drought that has affected harvests, she said.
Another 2.2 million people in urban areas also faced food shortages and lacked access to minimum public services, including health and safe water.
“By the end of this year… the food security situation is expected to worsen with an estimated eight million people requiring urgent action to reduce food consumption gaps and save livelihoods,” she said, describing the numbers as “shocking”.
Zimbabwe is in the grips of an entrenched economic crisis, pervasive corruption, poverty and a crumbling health system.
The economy, crippled by decades of mismanagement under former president Robert Mugabe, has failed to rebound under Emmerson Mnangagwa, who took over following a military-led coup two years ago.
“Political polarisation, economic and financial problems and erratic climatic conditions all contribute to the storm of food insecurity currently facing a country once seen as the breadbasket of Africa,” Elver said.
She warned that food insecurity heightened “the risks of civil unrest and insecurity”.
“I urgently call on the government and the international community to come together to put an end to this spiralling crisis before it morphs into a full-blown social unrest,” she said.
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