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Zimbabwe: Zimbabwe: Food Security Outlook Update August 2015

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Source: Famine Early Warning System Network
Country: Zimbabwe

Food insecurity expected to worsen in the southern provinces due to limited livelihood options

Key Messages

  • Households in most southern provinces are currently facing Stressed (IPC Phase 2) and Crisis (IPC Phase 3) outcomes through September. These outcomes are expected to deteriorate to Crisis (IPC Phase 3) from October through December as cereal demand and prices increase. In most northern districts, the majority of households are experiencing Minimum (IPC Phase 1) outcomes. A few areas will transition to Stressed (IPC Phase 2) and Crisis (IPC Phase 3) food security outcomes as households begin to rely more on cereal purchases between September and December.

  • In southern provinces some households are selling livestock earlier than normal in order to be able to purchase mainly maize meal, and people are seeking more work in petty trading and informal gold panning/mining. Maize meal availability and prices may be affected by the recent government ban on lower priced maize meal imports.

  • For the consumption year, safety-net interventions by the government and partners are expected to be limited. Lean season humanitarian assistance is also expected to be lower than normal due to a challenging funding situation. Partners are still in consultations with donors about program start dates, locations, and beneficiary targeting.


Zimbabwe: Donor Aid Backbone of Zimbabwe's Health Sector as State Coffers Almost Run Dry

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Source: Voice of America
Country: Zimbabwe

Irwin Chifera

HARARE — Zimbabwe’s public health sector is in crisis as the government fails to adequately fund it, leaving external donors and foreign countries to chip-in with $147 million support against the state’s meager $53 million allocation for this year.

Despite the external support, the funds are still fall far short of the $303 million the health ministry had requested in the 2015 national budget to effectively run its operations.

A perusal of the government’s 2015 budget shows that the health ministry, through the donor funds and the government meagre contribution, received $300 million for use this year with $177 million going towards employment costs, $53 million for operations and $28 million for capital expenditure.

Of the $53 million set aside for operations, only $8 million was allocated for all the public hospitals in the country, against total requirements of $142 million.

A senior official in the Health Ministry, Martin Matongera, recently told a Health Forum meeting for journalists, organized by the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, that the budget allocation for 2015 was grossly inadequate, making it difficult for nurses and doctors to run the country’s public hospitals.

Matongera said there’s need for the government to step-up domestic support for health services in the country, adding though the treasury had authorized hospitals to retain money charged for services provided, funds remain largely inadequate to meet the nation’s health requirements.

He said hospitals are expected to collect $35 million from service fees though this appears to be highly unlikely given the economic meltdown being currently experienced in the country.

As at the end of July, hospitals in the country had collected slightly more than $210,000 only, a mere drop in the ocean compared to the expected income.

Community Working Group on Health director, Itai Rusike, says it’s unfortunate that the bulk of Zimbabwe’s health funding is now coming from donors.

But most worrying, Rusike says, is that not all the allocated funds in the budget are disbursed.

He adds that donors should come in to complement government efforts in the provisions of health services.

Zimbabwe Doctors for Human’s chairperson, Doctor Rutendo Bonde, agrees, noting that the government is the primary custodian of public health and it is its constitutional mandate to look after its citizens.

She adds that the public health delivery system will remain in a crisis as long as there is insufficient domestic financing of the health care system.

Donor funds are disbursed through various programs. For example one of the major donors, Global Fund, will fund malaria programs in the country to the tune of $10.6 million and HIV/AIDS initiatives will receive $6.9 million. The American government spends millions of dollars on HIV/AIDS programs under the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief in Zimbabwe every year.

Harare resident, Tobias Dewa, says it is time the government prioritized health sector funding as people are dying needlessly from preventable diseases like diarrhea.

Health journalist, John Cassim, says the situation in the health sector is bad, adding it’s the poor who are most affected as they cannot afford to pay for health care at private hospitals or travel abroad for medical check-ups and treatment as is done by President Robert Mugabe, his ministers and top government officials regularly.

With no public health insurance scheme, most Zimbabweans rely on government-owned public health hospitals while only 1.2 million of Zimbabwe’s 14 million people are covered by private health insurance schemes.

Medical aid companies last year paid out claims of over $400 million against a national budget of $340 million.

Normally, the health budget used to come second after education in terms of budgetary allocations but this year it was pushed to fifth position. Dr. Bonde said this was largely because social service ministries lack the political clout to demand their fair share of the national budget.

Zimbabwe’s 2015 budget misses the Abuja Declaration target by 4.4 percent in terms of prioritizing the health and other social service ministries.

Democratic Republic of the Congo: Statement from the nineteenth Southern Africa Regional Climate Outlook Forum (SARCOF-19), Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, 26 – 28 August 2015

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Source: Southern African Development Community
Country: Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, United Republic of Tanzania, Zimbabwe

SUMMARY
The bulk of the southern tier states of continental Southern African Development Community (SADC) is likely to receive normal to below-normal rainfall for the period October to December (OND) 2015 and the January to March (JFM) 2016. However, most Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) northern Angola, Tanzania, north-eastern Zambia, northern Malawi, northern Mozambique, the Islands States of Mauritius, Seychelles and eastern-most Madagascar are more likely to receive normal to above-normal rainfall. Northernmost of Tanzania and Madagascar are more likely to receive above-normal to normal rainfall.

THE NINETEENTH SOUTHERN AFRICA REGIONAL CLIMATE OUTLOOK FORUM

The Nineteenth Southern Africa Regional Climate Outlook Forum was held in Kinshasa,
DRC from 26 to 28 August 2015 to present a consensus outlook for the 2015/2016 rainfall season over the SADC region. Climate scientists from the SADC National Meteorological and/or Hydrological Services (NMHSs), the SADC Climate Services Centre (CSC) formulated this outlook. Additional products from other global climate prediction centres namely, European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecast (ECMWF), International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI), UK Met Office and Bureau of Meteorology, Australia (BoM) were considered in formulation of the consensus seasonal climate outlook. This outlook covers the major rainfall season in SADC countries, i.e. from October 2015 to March 2016. The outlooks are presented in overlapping three-monthly periods as follows: October-November- December (OND); November-December-January (NDJ); December-January-February (DJF); and January-February-March (JFM)

World: CrisisWatch N°145, 1 September 2015

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Source: International Crisis Group
Country: Afghanistan, Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Colombia, Côte d'Ivoire, Cyprus, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, Fiji, Georgia, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, India, Indonesia, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Mexico, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Niger, Nigeria, occupied Palestinian territory, Pakistan, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Thailand, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of), World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

August 2015 – Trends

  • Deteriorated situations

Afghanistan, Burundi, Central African Republic, Colombia/Venezuela, Guatemala, Kashmir, Lebanon, Nepal, Yemen

  • Improved situations

Guinea, South Sudan, Sri Lanka

September 2015 – Watchlist

  • Conflict risk alerts

Colombia/Venezuela, Guatemala, Iraq, Nepal, Yemen

  • Conflict resolution opportunities

    South Sudan

Zimbabwe: Masvingo Villagers Sell Livestock to Raise Money for Food

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Source: Voice of America
Country: Zimbabwe

Gandri Maramba

MASVINGO—Thousands of villagers in some parts of Masvingo province that have been hit hard by the drought are being forced to sell off priced livestock to feed their families as hunger stalks the drought-prone region.

Villagers, who spoke with Studio 7, said they have no other means to survive but to sell livestock to feed their families. This follows poor rains that were received in the drought-prone province as well as some parts of the country.

Mr. Aron Edias of Rashai village under Chief Charumbira said everywhere he goes in the region, hunger and starvation are staring poor villagers right into their faces.

“Right now we have a big problem, we were supposed to reap good harvests and our crops had reached tasseling stage but they dried up. People are struggling and they are now surviving on anything. They are now exchanging anything from cattle and goats, even meat offals (for food),” said Mr. Edias.

Another villager from Muguti village in Chivi, Ms. Lilian Gumbo under Chief Madyangove, said the situation is getting dire for most families, especially as the government and non-governmental organizations have not yet started assisting them with food aid.

She noted that with many people being laid off in the city, most villagers have no source of income and are struggling to buy the staple maize in local shops which are selling at exorbitant prices due to demand in the face of mounting food shortages.

Other villagers said they fear that lives could be lost in the province if the government and well-wishers do not intervene on time, especially to assist child-headed households and grandmothers looking after AIDS orphans.

They added that many children have since dropped out of school due to economic hardships.

They believe that the number may increase come next week when schools open for the third and final term of the year.

The World Food Programme recently announced that about 1,5 million Zimbabweans need urgent food aid due to severe food shortages.

Masvingo Provincial Affairs Minister, Ms. Shuvai Mahofa, declined to comment but she told Zanu PF supporters at a meeting in Chivi district over the weekend that the government is finalizing logistics to distribute food aid to people in the province.

Mahofa told the gathering that her administration would prioritize hard-hit areas like Chivi and Mwenezi districts.

United Republic of Tanzania: Southern Africa Weekly Report (25th - 31st August 2015)

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Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Country: Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, United Republic of Tanzania, Zimbabwe

Regional Overview

Tanzania

A cholera outbreak in Tanzania is affected the areas of Dar es Salaam, Morogoro, Iringa and Pwani. As of 30 August 2015, there have been 459 cases and 9 deaths in Dar es Salaam, 69 cases and 5 deaths in Morogoro, 2 cases in Iringa and 16 cases and 1 death in Pwani.

Madagascar

Pneumonic plague has been recorded in the Moramanga District, 110 km from the capital of Antananarivo. Since the first reported case on 20 August a total of 14 cases and 10 deaths have been reported. No new cases have been reported since 27 August 2015

Zimbabwe: ZPP Monthly Monitor (July 2015)

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Source: Zimbabwe Peace Project
Country: Zimbabwe

Executive Summary

Zimbabwe continues to spiral into a crisis. The major conflict drivers being the rampant job losses across the country, demolition of houses, deepening inter and intra party conflict, the perpetual election mode as a result of by-elections and serious food deficits currently ravaging the country. The Fragile States Index of 20151 ranks Zimbabwe in the “high alert” category at number 100. Zimbabwe fared badly at most of the indices which pointed at severe poverty, economic decline, progressive deterioration of public service, violations of human rights and risein factional fights among other issues. The vendor crisis stole the limelight in the month of July. Vendors in most of the major cities such as Harare, Bulawayo, Gweru and Masvingo had been issued with notices to vacate the streets and move to designated vending sites. On the 8th of July the Harare City Council started the eviction of vendors from the streets and this was met with stiff resistance by the vendors. There was pandemonium in the city as vendors clashed with municipal police and among themselves. Most of the vendors interviewed by ZPP indicated that the new designated vending sites were not ideal for business as they were located away from their potential market.

The vendor crisis has the potential to ignite civil unrest strife as thousands of Zimbabweans are resorting to vending in light of the deteriorating economic environment. The defiance demonstrated by some vendors as they kept returning to the streets to sell their wares point to their determination to protect their only source of livelihood. According to the Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transformation (VISET),173 462 vendors were displaced from CBD areas in the month of July and goods worth $579 239.00 were confiscated by municipal police.

Zimbabwe: Urban Farming Mushrooms in Africa Amid Food Deficits

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Source: Inter Press Service
Country: World, Zimbabwe

By Jeffrey Moyo

HARARE, Sep 2 2015 (IPS) - There is a scramble for unoccupied land in Africa, but this time it is not British, Portuguese, French or other colonialists racing to occupy the continent’s vacant land – it is the continent’s urban dwellers fast turning to urban farming amid the rampant food shortages that have not spared them.

Inadequate wages have aggravated the situation of many, like Agness Samwenje who lives in Harare’s high density Mufakose suburb, and they have found that turning to urban farming is one way of supplementing their supply of food.

Samwenje, a pre-school teacher who took over an open piece of land to cultivate in vicinity to a farm, told IPS that “this mini-farming here is a back-up means to feed my family because the 200 dollars I earn monthly is not enough to support my family after becoming the breadwinner following the death of my husband four years ago, leaving me to care for our three school-going children.”

“I now spend very little money buying food because crops from my small field here in the city supplement my food,” she added.

For others, like jobless 34-year-old Silveira Sinorita from Mozambique who now lives in the Zimbabwean town of Mutare, urban farming has become their job as they battle to feed their families.

“Without employment, I have found that farming here in town is an answer to my food woes at home because I grow my own potatoes, beans, vegetables and fresh maize cobs, whose surplus I then sell,” Sinorita told IPS.

Pushed to the edge by mounting food deficits, urban farmers in other African countries have even gone beyond mere crop farming. In cities such as Kampala in Uganda and Yaoundé in Cameroon, many urban households are raising livestock, including poultry, dairy cattle and pigs.

Urban farming is mushrooming in Africa’s towns and cities at a time the United Nations is urging nations the world over to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), more than 800 million people around the world practise urban agriculture and it has helped cushion them against rising food costs and insecurity, although the U.N. agency also warns that the number of hungry people has risen to over one billion globally, with the “urban poor being particularly vulnerable.”

However, urban farming in Africa is often met with opposition from the authorities where land is owned by local municipalities and agricultural experts say that opposing it makes no sense in the face of growing food insecurity.

“Poverty is not sparing even people living in the cities because jobs are getting scarce on the continent and as a result, farming in cities is fast becoming a common trend as people battle to supplement their foods, this despite urban farming being prohibited in towns and cities here,” government agricultural officer Norman Hwengwere told IPS. Zimbabwe’s local authority by-laws prohibit farming on vacant municipal land.

FAO has also reported that Africa’s market gardens are the most threatened by the continent’s growth spurt because they are typically not regulated or supported by governments, and a recent study has called for governments to become more involved.

In a 2011 research study titled ‘Growing Potential: Africa’s Urban Farmers’, Anna Plyushteva, a PhD student at University College London, argues that greater government involvement is needed for urban agriculture to emerge out of marginality and illegality and deliver greater environmental and social benefits.

“Without official regulation, urban farming can create some serious problems. At present, informal farmers and their produce are exposed to contamination with organic and non-organic pollutants, which is a serious threat to public health,” said Plyushteva.

For independent Zambian development expert Mulubwa Nakalonga, the more people flock to cities, the more pressure they add to the limited resources there.

“There is increased rural-to-urban migration in Africa as people seek better employment opportunities which, however, they rarely find and subsequently turn to farming on open pieces of land in towns in order for them to survive because they have no money to buy foodstuffs,” Nakalonga told IPS.

“Often when people migrate from rural areas anywhere here in Africa, they cling to their agricultural heritage of practices through urban agriculture which you see many practising in towns today to evade hunger,” Nakalonga added.

In the Tanzanian capital of Dar es Salaam, for example, urban gardens in some communities resemble those found in the country’s rural areas from which people migrated.

Despite the opposition elsewhere, some African cities are nevertheless supporting the urban farming trend. The Cape Town local authority in South Africa, for example, introduced its first urban agriculture policy document in 2007, focusing on the importance of urban agriculture for poverty alleviation and job creation.

As FAO projects that there will be 35 million urban farmers in Africa by 2020, it is supporting programmes in some countries to capitalise on the benefits. In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), for example, FAO’s Urban Horticulture Programme is building on the skills of rural farmers who have come to the cities.

The FAO programme in DRC started in response to the country’s massive rural-to-urban exodus following a five-year conflict and now helps local urban farmers to produce 330,000 tons of vegetables each year, while providing employment and income for 16,000 small-scale market gardeners in the country’s towns and cities.

The country’s urban farmers sell 90 percent of what they produce in urban markets and supermarkets, according to FAO, helping to feed a swelling urban population as Congolese flee the countryside in search of security.

Meanwhile, in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, various groups and agencies have helped popularise the “vertical farm in a bag” concept in which city dwellers create their own gardens using tall sacks filled with soil from which plant life grows.

With hunger hitting both rural and urban African dwellers hard, an increasing number of them believe that urban farming is the way to go.

Edited by Phil Harris


Malawi: Poor Rains in the 2014/2015 Season Affect Food Security in the SADC Region

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Source: Southern African Development Community
Country: Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe

The SADC says the 2014/15 rainfall season was generally poor in most parts of the region, with prolonged dry spells in some parts and both floods and prolonged dry spells in other parts resulting in an unsatisfactory overall food security situation for the 2015/16 marketing year.

Director for Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources (FANR) at the SADC Secretariat, Mrs. Margaret Nyirenda, said this during a media briefing held on 14th August 2015 at the Gaborone International Conference Centre (GICC) ahead of the 35th Ordinary Summit for Heads of States in Botswana.

Mrs. Nyirenda explained that Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa, southern Angola and Zimbabwe experienced prolonged dry spells while Madagascar, Malawi and Mozambique experienced both floods and prolonged dry spells. She added that the poor rainfall has led to an unsatisfactory overall Regional food security situation for the 2015/16 marketing year, with an overall cereal (maize, wheat, rice, millet and sorghum) deficit of 7.90 million tonnes compared to a surplus of 1.21 million tonnes in 2014/15 marketing year.

“This year the Regional cereal availability is estimated at 40.40 million tonnes, representing a drop of 11.4% from 45.62 million tonnes last year. It is important to note that this year availability of maize which usually makes up more than 75% of total cereal production is forecast at 27.40 million tonnes compared to 36.79 million tonnes last year,” Mrs Nyirenda pointed out.

She further explained that the total requirement for the region this year is estimated at 34.50 million tonnes against 31.73 million tonnes that is available, thereby reflecting an overall maize deficit of 2.64 million tonnes.

On Cassava, Mrs. Nyirenda said that production from Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia amounted to 44.80 million tonnes representing a drop in production compared to last year’s production of 48.06 million tonnes. She observed that although lower than last year’s production, the 2015 production is still above the 5-year average, indicating the resilience of the crop to drought.

With regards to legumes, Mrs. Nyirenda said that available data indicate that a total of 2.12 million tonnes were produced by the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Mozambique and South Africa while production of oil seeds from Malawi, Mozambique and South Africa was forecast at 2.18 million tonnes.

In the area of Livestock production, she pointed out that according to the 2014 Vulnerability Assessment Report an average annual increase of 4% beef, 6% mutton and lamb, 0.7% pork, 4% poultry, 2 % milk and 3% for eggs is projected. However, in spite of this projected increase in production, the Region remains a net importer of most livestock products. Arguably, the Region has great potential to increase livestock production, especially for small stocks and poultry.

In Fisheries production, Mrs. Nyirenda noted there was a steady increase due to increases in aquaculture production in some of the Member States. The aquaculture sub-sector has generated an annual average growth rate of about 10%. She however observed that the overall capture fisheries production trends indicate that the Region produces only 2.4 million tonnes of the 91.3 million tonnes of global captured fisheries, both of which have stagnated.

“Fish stocks both inland and marine have continued to dwindle due to challenges with Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing and lack of capacity to effectively manage fish stocks,” said Mrs Nyirenda.

Mrs. Nyirenda reiterated the SADC’s resolve to implement the Regional Agricultural Policy that was endorsed by Council in August 2014 and other relevant Protocols in order to improve production, productivity, competitiveness and trade in the agricultural sector, natural resources and environment.

She stated that the Region continues to take the necessary measures to provide food and non-food relief supplies to the 27.42 million vulnerable people and support them to recover from the disaster; and to promote and scale-up appropriate climate smart technologies on agriculture, energy, water and other relevant areas which mitigate against the impact of climate change and improve food security in the Region.

Zimbabwe: UNICEF trains partners to reduce stunting in Chiredzi

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Source: UN Children's Fund
Country: Zimbabwe

By Reshmi Majumdar

Latest evidence from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) recognizes that stunting is not only linked to nutrition, but also to other essential services such as water and sanitation, education, gender equality and social services.

In order, to reduce stunting which currently affects one in three children, the Government of Zimbabwe realized the need of multi-sectoral approach delivered through a community based model to effectively deal with this challenge.

The implementation of the model supported by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO) is increasingly contributing to the Scaling of Nutrition (SON) initiative.

The implementation structures are the multi-sectoral food and nutrition security committees at all levels. To improve coordination and reporting of multi-sectoral interventions capacity building of district and ward level food and nutrition security committees was conducted. UNICEF in partnership with the Food and Nutrition Council (FNC), Ministry of Health and Child Care (MoHCC) and ZimStat conducted Training of Trainers (ToT) to District Food and Nutrition Committees in Chiredzi in late August.

The key benefit of the ToT was to enable the trainers at district level to cascade the training to those at the ground level. This is critical in achieving the rapid rollout of services as well as ensuring a coordinated pool of workers trained to deliver services needed to prevent stunting. The model incorporated a combination of four modules and effective methodologies which ensured that participants cascade high quality training upon successful completion of the trainings.

As explained by Mr. P Tizai the co-Chairman District Food and Nutrition Committee, the training that was conducted in Chiredzi will help to quicken the trainings downstream as it was becoming difficult to train the increased numbers at ward level.

The training saw District Food and Nutrition Security Committees being capacitated on the legal framework that governs nutrition matters in Zimbabwe and the seven commitments of the Food and Nutrition security policy under ZIMASSET and Multi-Sectoral Community Based Model (MSCBM). During the training, both participants and trainers identified the need to have an inclusive approach that involves Water, sanitation and Hygiene, Agriculture, Education, Gender, and Social Services if the country is to effectively deal with the challenge of stunting.

The Provincial Representative Chair of the Food and Nutrition Security Committee (FNSC) in Masvingo, Mr. Elphas Mugari, pointed that, “The training will capacitate the FNSC to achieve mandates such as growing nutritious foods, educate wards and villages on WASH components and advocate nutritional intake for children and pregnant women.”

The training also focused on targeting and assessment of drivers of stunting. Mr. George Kembo, the FNC Director, said, “Targeting is aimed to improve the situation without creating social discourse. We are happy to impart knowledge to both the targeted households as well as the generic community within the identified area. Even those without any problem, can benefit from the accumulated knowledge”.

The participants were also trained on the ward action plan which was conducted through group work, focus group discussions, and talks on components of ward action plan and how to develop the monthly action plan. The importance of adopting a holistic approach within a community facing stunting focusing on inputs, activities, outputs, outcomes and impact as a stunting reduction were shared.

UNICEF’s Nutrition Specialist, Mrs. Charity Zvandaziva highlighted that Ward Food and Nutrition Security Committees (WFNSCs) and Village Food and Nutrition Security Committees (VFNSCs) should be told to prioritize key problems, and classify the interventions, required actions within a time frame, potential barriers and strategies to overcome challenges as mentioned in the action plan template

The training also looked at the advantage of using technology in carrying out ‘near real time monitoring system’ (NRTM) and the role of ward and village level FNSCs in data collection, analysis and reporting. Related data will have a two-way flow from village level to the national level. Moving from paper based data collection, participants learnt the functionality of the Open Data Kit through household module, ward module, FNS Committees functionality module, social accountability module and alert module.

Mr. Tafadzwa Mufudza, the Environmental Health Technician officer said the NRTM will facilitate effective monitoring for reducing stunting in Chiredzi.

“Before, we used to focus only on the environmental aspect, but now there are indicators on nutrition, agriculture, education, youth and social services, which will assist us in reducing stunting in the district”.

Malawi: Southern Africa moves on Sendai Framework

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Source: UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction
Country: Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe

By Adam Fysh

MAPUTO, 7 September 2015 – African leaders and experts on disaster risk are moving ahead on detailed planning of implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, the new global agreement on reducing disaster losses and a key pillar of the post-2015 Development Agenda.

They have also agreed on peer reviews of each other’s performance in implementing national action plans based on the Sendai Framework. This process will start in September when Malawi will undergo the first such peer review on the continent.

"We cannot be surprised by climate change. If we don't learn lessons from the past, we will lose lives, assets and investments because we have forgotten the lessons of 30 years ago,” said Mr. Jaime Neto, a Member of Mozambique’s Parliament who sits in the Committee on Agriculture, Economy and Environment.

The head of UNISDR, Margareta Wahlström, welcomed the outcome of the forum. “There can be no doubt about Africa’s commitment to disaster risk reduction. Africa was the first region to hold an inter-governmental meeting to voice support for the Sendai Framework. It is a great advance to see peer reviews will now be used for exchanging experience between countries in disaster risk management and monitoring the implementation of agreed commitments,” she said.

A three-day forum in August, hosted by Mozambique and supported by the 13-member Southern African Development Community (SADC), brought together leaders and experts from countries which have suffered major disaster events over the last 20 years, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

“The key outcome of the forum is that each country delegation has developed a detailed plan of action that outlines explicitly how they can return to their home countries and tackle the important work of integrating disaster risk reduction across all sectors and throughout all levels of government,” explained Ms. Sharon Rusu, the head of UNISDR’s Regional Office for Africa.

“They are working on how to integrate ideas such as resilient infrastructure, agriculture, spatial planning, risk governance and climate services into national planning processes,” added Ms. Rusu.

The forum entitled The Fifth Leadership Development Forum on Mainstreaming Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction into Development (MADRiD), concluded August 28 and was organized by UNISDR Regional Office for Africa, the United Nations Development Programme and the Government of Mozambique with support from South Korea's Ministry of Public Policy and Security and the Metropolitan City of Incheon, and the Southern Africa Development Community.

It aimed at boosting the development of operational plans to integrate Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) and Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) into national development planning and budgetary processes and to increase social demand and political commitment.

Commenting on next steps, Mr. Blessing Silewa, an Information Management Officer for Disaster Risk Reduction with SADC noted "the national peer review process will take up where this workshop leaves off. It will push countries beyond self-reporting on progress of implementation of Disaster Risk Reduction mainstreaming.”

The Sendai Framework sets targets to achieve the substantial reduction of disaster risk and losses in lives, livelihoods and health and in the economic, physical, social, cultural and environmental assets of persons, businesses, communities and countries.

Malawi: Malawi hosts the final SRH/HIV Linkages Steering Committee Meeting

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Source: UN Population Fund
Country: Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Lilongwe- Malawi successfully hosted the 5th and final regional project steering committee of the United Nations Aids (UNAIDS) and United Nations for Population Agency (UNFPA) joint initiative on Linking Sexual Reproductive Health Rights and HIV (SRHR-HIV) in Southern Africa from 7th to 9th September in Lilongwe. The Minister of Health officially opened the meeting attended by the UNAIDS Deputy Regional Director as well as the UN Resident coordinator for Malawi, Mia Seppo. "The importance of this regional meeting is so significant that it makes all of us feel proud as we get to the realities of providing sexual and reproductive health and HIV services using the evidence generated by this project from the seven countries that are present here today" said Minister of Health Peter Kumpalume during the official opening. He further said in all the countries, there have been lessons learnt and good practices documented that will further influence the scaling up of SRHR-HIV integration to other areas within the respective country's zones

In her remarks UNFPA Country Representative, Violet Kakyomya speaking on behalf of the UNFPA Regional Director for East and Southern Africa Region, said the project aimed at addressing barriers linking to sexual reproductive health and HIV so as to effectively and efficiently increase access to and use of critical HIV and SRH services. "This project has demonstrated great partnerships with strong leadership from respective Governments through the Ministries of Health, among UN agencies and civil society partners that have been our strong allies throughout. We have made tremendous achievements through country led efforts some of which include integration approaches that have been adopted in respective countries' health and development plans, policies and strategies and piloting of innovative service models that suggest improved service uptake among others " she said.

The meeting was attended by participants from Botswana, Namibia, Lesotho, Malawi, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Other partners such as IPPF and donors like European Union and Norad were also represented. The participants started the meeting with a field visit in two groups. One group went to Family Planning Association of Malawi clinic at Kawale township in Lilongwe where they interacted with service providers as well as members of the Nzotheka youth group. The other group visited Ntakataka health facility to appreciate the SRH/HIV integration at facility level.

Zimbabwe: Japan Helps WFP Build Resilience In Zimbabwe

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Source: Government of Japan, World Food Programme
Country: Japan, Zimbabwe

HARARE – The Government of Japan has given a contribution of US$1.5 million to Zimbabwe through the UN World Food Programme (WFP) to enable vulnerable people to develop community assets in Zimbabwe. The assets, including irrigation and water harvesting systems, will help improve livelihoods and sustainable food security in two districts, Zvishavane and Mwenezi.

These are among a number of districts in southern Zimbabwe that have suffered as a result of consecutive bad harvests caused by poor rains during the growing season. It is estimated that at least 1.5 million people in the country will be food insecure during the height of the lean season after a decrease of 50 percent in crop production this year. In Zvishavane and Mwenezi, some 83,000 people are likely to face hunger during the height of the 2015/16 lean season.

“Japan’s contribution not only helps us meet people’s immediate food needs but also helps provide the most vulnerable with a means to cope with shocks such as drought,” says WFP Country Director of Zimbabwe Eddie Rowe. “Building resilience is the key to achieving sustainable development and creating a future free from hunger.”

Under WFP’s Productive Asset Creation programme, launched in June this year, participants work on community projects that promote self-reliance, reduce disaster risk and support climate change adaptation. In return, they receive food or cash transfers to cater for their immediate needs.

“Japan has been a major contributor to WFP’s operations for over a decade,” says the Ambassador of Japan to Zimbabwe, H.E. Mr. Yoshinobu Hiraishi. “I am glad to note that this partnership has developed from strength to strength as WFP is adopting an increasingly wide range of innovative initiatives such as the Productive Assets Creation Programme.”

Since 2012, WFP has helped create nearly a thousand community assets in more than 25 rural districts. This year, WFP’s asset creation activities are being implemented in a total of 10 priority districts.

The Government of Japan is one of the largest donors in Zimbabwe. Since 2010, it has provided more than US$ 43 million in humanitarian and development assistance through WFP and other agencies.

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WFP is the world's largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger worldwide, delivering food assistance in emergencies and working with communities to improve nutrition and build resilience. Each year, WFP assists some 80 million people in around 75 countries.

Follow us on Twitter @wfp_media and @WFP_Africa

For more information please contact:

Tinashe Mubaira, WFP/Harare, Tel. +263 4 252471, Mob. +263 772 542 904, Email: tinashe.mubaira@wfp.org

Yoshitake Tsuzuki, Embassy of Japan, Tel: +263 4250025-7, Mob: +263 712 201 574

Zimbabwe: As drought destroys maize, Zimbabwe tries out new staples

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Source: AlertNet
Country: Zimbabwe

Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation - Fri, 11 Sep 2015 09:53 GMT

Author: Busani Bafana

JAMBEZI, Zimbabwe, Sept 11 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - For more than 20 years, Dalarex Ncube grew maize in arid Jambezi District, one of Zimbabwe's driest regions, and his family ate maize porridge, the national staple.

Read the story on the Thomson Reuters Foundation

Zimbabwe: Poverty breeds child workers

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Source: The Zimbabwean
Country: Zimbabwe

Benard, aged 13, works 15 hours a day at a grocery store - from 08:00 in the morning until 11:00 at night.

He only gets paid $50 a month, never gets a week-end off and yet he still considers himself to be one of the ‘lucky’ ones.

“I didn’t have three meals a day when I was living with my poor parents in my village. Now I have food, shelter and even some money left over at the end of each month,” he said.

Moleen, a fruit and vegetable vendor and mother of five believes that her girls probably view their own fate in a similar light. Her daughters, who should ideally be in school, work as house maids in Harare because their mother can no longer support her family.

“I am unable to work regularly due to health problems. The monthly earnings of my two daughters amount to $100 dollars and helps the family to survive,” she said. Poverty is the root cause of child labour and experts say this is the reason why there is no immediate prospect of this inhumane practice being eliminated any time soon.

50% live below poverty line

“Poverty remains very high. There is no chance of eradicating the practice of using child labour where more than 50% of the total population lives below the poverty line,” said a local labour expert.

Research indicates that approximately 13 million inhabitants of this impoverished country live in extreme poverty.

Still, experts are adamant that this fact should not be used as an excuse for slackening the effort to prevent children from taking on hazardous work. Experts add that more measures to limit the number of families dependent on their children’s incomes should be put in place.

With already nearly 1.5 million child workers between the age of five and 14 being exploited, it is high time the government introduce a comprehensive programme to address this social scourge.

Piecemeal efforts

Research reveals that the average citizen seems content to rely on the government’s present piecemeal efforts that does very little for too few children. Indeed, experts advise that most of the efforts to abolish child labour are initiated by Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and international charity groups.

In many slum households, children’s wages make up a third of the family income. Only a few child workers are found in urban areas. The majority are in the rural areas. It is high time that a nation-wide advocacy and awareness campaign against child labour is launched.

Section 11 of the Labour Amendment Act gazetted recently states that: ‘This clause sets out the minimum age in which a young person may engage in work as 16 years in terms of the Labour Act (Chapter 28:01) and the Manpower Planning and Development Act.’ (Chapter 28:02).

The draft labour bill outlaws the employment of children under the age of 16, but experts point out that the law covers only the formal sector where a mere 4% of child labour is found. The implementation of this bill also leaves much to be desired as most of the children who need protection are believed to work in the informal sector or in factories, shops and markets near their homes.


Zimbabwe: Patriarchal Society Exposing Zimbabwean Women to HIV Infections

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Source: Voice of America
Country: Zimbabwe

Thato Mochone

WASHINGTON DC— Patriarchal order has left many Zimbabwean women more vulnerable to HIV infection as they remain subservient to men with no negotiating power in sex matters.

Millicent Shoko, a Zimbabwean woman working with people living with HIV, told VOA Studio 7 men’s sexual freedom coupled with poverty have exposed more women to HIV infections.

Shoko said the plight of women and HIV can only be overcome if men are involved in programs aimed at women and HIV so that they are the one who come up with solutions they find suitable for their problems.
Shoko noted that it was a losing battle to try to empower and educate women alone leaving men out of the programs.

"Many women are aware of the existence of HIV and have taken it upon themselves to get tested, but the problem we found during our encounters with some of the women was that they were either afraid to tell their partners of their HIV status for fear of being blamed or their partners would not agree to using protection during sex."

"We can only defeat the fight against HIV/AIDS if all stakeholders are involved," Shoko emphasised.

Shoko also noted that sometimes women are forced into prostitution due to poverty, hence they put their lives at risk so that they can provide for their families. "With the current state of the economy in Zimbabwe, many women, especially widowed women who relied on their spouses for subsistence, have found themselves forced to engage in sex in exchange for money or favours, putting their lives at risk," Shoko sadly noted.

A study on human rights and gender issues in Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe by World Health Organisation found Sub-Saharan Africa to be the only part of the world where HIV prevalence and AIDS deaths are higher for women than men.

The study further indicated that these countries have acceded to the Convention of the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women, but only a few have applied domestically the international conventions to which they agreed and their laws keep women subordinate to men, thus putting them at increased risk of HIV.

Interview with Zimbabwean AIDS Advocate, Millicent Shoko

World: Building the resilience of African rural communities to disasters and crisis

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Source: Food and Agriculture Organization
Country: Burkina Faso, Chad, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Niger, Somalia, South Sudan, World, Zimbabwe

by Mona Chaya

In Africa, agriculture supports the livelihoods of over 800 million people (80 percent of the population), providing employment for around 60 percent of the economically active population and 70 percent of the poorest (around 270 million people).

Smallholder farmers, pastoralists and agro-pastoralists living in drylands and relying on crops, livestock, fisheries and forests for their livelihoods are often the worst affected when a disaster strikes. However, in Africa, it is not only about the level of exposure to disaster risks, but the capacity to prevent, anticipate, manage and recover from disasters and crises.

Africa accounts for only 15 % of global natural disasters, however, the toll of these disasters is quite severe in terms of human development set-backs. Strengthening vulnerable people to become resilient to threats and crises is a priority for human development in this region.

This is why FAO started its Resilience Initiative in Africa’s Drylands in 2012. Nine focus countries were identified to benefit from a proactive support to improve their capacities at both national and community levels in the Sahel (Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, and Niger), the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan) and Southern Africa (Zimbabwe).

This initiative builds on existing experience and involves strong collaboration with similar initiatives and partnerships in the region, such as the Global Alliance for Resilience Initiative (AGIR) in the Sahel and the Supporting Horn of Africa Resilience (SHARE) initiatives.

The FAO Regional Initiative assists countries to strengthen institutional capacity for developing and implementing policies on risk prevention and reduction including focus on Regional Economic Communities (RECs) and other regional bodies. It also facilitates knowledge exchange across sub-regions and between countries.

Furthermore, it aims at supporting partners in learning and applying vulnerability mapping and analysis through already existing tools such as Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), Resilience Index Measurement and Analysis (RIMA) as well as improving and extending early warning systems.

Anticipating and preventing recurrent crises affecting food security and nutrition proactively is critical to address the root causes of the vulnerability of farmers, herders and fishermen, particularly women. This is particularly true if we consider that these drylands with their fragile ecosystems are facing a recurrent combination of natural disasters, food chain crises, conflicts and protracted crises.

World: Support children’s access to clean water and basic toilets

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Source: UN Children's Fund
Country: Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Mali, World, Zimbabwe

By Danny Glover / 14 September 2015

Access to water is a basic human right, however today there are 663 million people who go without. Today, there are 2.4 billion people who do not use a basic toilet, and almost 1 billion who go in the open. While significant progress has been made to improve this situation, millions of children in poor and rural communities have been left behind.

As an advocate for child rights and as a global citizen, today I ask you to join me in supporting UNICEF to reach all children, everywhere, with access to clean drinking water and basic sanitation.

Over the last 10 years I have been working with UNICEF as a Goodwill Ambassador to advocate for the rights of children around the world. During this time I have been in places like Ethiopia to raise awareness about the dangers of landmines, in Tanzania and Burkina Faso to highlight the issues related to HIV and to visit centres that cares for HIV-infected children. I have also been to Colombia to join a campaign to protect children from sexual exploitation and violence. These are just some of the places I’ve traveled to with UNICEF.

Last week, I was in Stockholm to raise awareness and funds for UNICEF’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Programmes in Africa and to speak up for the millions of children around the world who are living without clean water and toilets. For these children, a lack of access to drinking water and sanitation places their health, safety, education and survival at risk. Today, water and sanitation related diseases remain among the major causes of death in children under five. Nearly 1,000 children die every day from diarrhoeal diseases linked to poor sanitation and hygiene. These conditions have also been closely linked to stunting, which affects around 161 million children worldwide, causing irreversible physical and cognitive damage.

Today I am asking for you to support UNICEF in their efforts to put an end to this crisis. UNICEF works in over 100 countries worldwide to support water and sanitation services, basic hygiene practices and to boost resilience in emergencies.

There have been some incredible stories of success in sub-Saharan Africa where UNICEF is on the ground in 35 countries to support the development and use of improved drinking water and sanitation. In Ethiopia for example, the proportion of people practicing open defecation has halved over the last decade – with more than 30 million people using a basic toilet. In Mali, there are 53% fewer diarrhoea related deaths and 14% less stunting in children under the age of five. Over 200 schools in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and a further 572 in Zimbabwe received new water, sanitation and hygiene facilities.

These are just some of the many stories of progress, but we need to hear more. With new challenges like climate change and urbanization putting even more children at risk, we must act now to ensure all children, everywhere fulfil their right to safe water and sanitation. This is crucial not only for their survival, but also their health, happiness, dignity, and development.

Danny Glover is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador.

Malawi: SADC Regional Summary Food & Livelihoods Insecurity - VAC 2015 Results, July 2015

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Source: Southern African Development Community
Country: Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Main Outcomes and Findings of the VACs

The number of food insecure people in the countries providing data increased by 13% (13.4 million this year compared to 10.3 million for last year) which was an above average year.

The exceptions were Mozambique and Swaziland where numbers continued to decrease.

In comparison to last year major increases in food insecure population are noted in Malawi, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe: Zimbabwe: Food Insecurity Emergency appeal n° MDRZW011

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Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies
Country: Zimbabwe

This Emergency Appeal seeks 832,900 Swiss francs to support the Zimbabwe Red Cross Society (ZRCS) to reach 10,830 people with a focus on interventions on the sectors of water, health hygiene promotion, food security, nutrition, and livelihoods (carried out through cash distributions). This appeal reflects the current situation and will be updated and adjusted based on the evolving nature of the crisis, new developments and assessments (as they are carried out).

The disaster and the Red Cross and Red Crescent response to date

January 2015: A slow onset of the rainy season was followed by severe flooding that destroyed crops. This situation was followed, and exacerbated, by a long dry spell, resulting in a crop yield below the 5 year average.

July 2015: Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee (ZIMVAC) report estimated 16% of Zimbabwe’s rural population are food insecure and 1,490,024 people will be in need of food assistance at the peak of the hunger period. Coping mechanisms are severely strained, and social safety-net interventions by the Government and partners are limited

September 2015: Based on the situation briefly described above, assessments to date, and a request from the ZRCS, Emergency Appeal launched for CHF 832,900 for 10,830 people, and CHF 83,000 allocated as DREF start-up funding

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