SPECIAL FEATURE FOOD POLITICS THREATEN VULNERABLE MEMBERS OF SOCIETY The issue of partisan distribution of food in Zimbabwe is currently a burning issue causing a high magnitude of concern. While shortages of the staple maize in the Southern African country have been perennial since the turn of the millennium when the agrarian reform took a fast track momentum which forced 4 000 commercial white farmers off the land to pave way for over 400 000 landless black people. While this gave land to the landless, it also essentially gave way to a considerable reduction in agricultural produce as some re-distributed land lay fallow; or in some instances the new “owners’ plain failed to produce to capacity due to financial and technical knowhow deficits, among other challenges, this season around the lack is set to be worse for ordinary citizens in the country side. Every year the country has produced less than adequate stocks of maize, that is nothing new, but this cropping reason comes against a backdrop of a severe drought – the most severe since 1992, experts have said. According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Perception Survey for this year, the food crisis currently facing the nation would escalate to starvation soon, with people in the rural areas set to be the worst hit. The grim predictions come as Zimbabwe was recently ranked number 18 in the top 20 countries most prone to hunger in the years 2015-16, after scoring 30,8 on a hunger index out of 50 by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). The organisation said the southern African country, which has been receiving unreliable rainfall in the past two years — and once a regional breadbasket — was going to see “starvation-ranking hunger” in 2016 due to the direct effect of the El Niño. El Niño is a climate cycle in the Pacific Ocean with a global impact on weather patterns. The cycle begins when warm water in the western tropical Pacific Ocean shifts eastward along the equator toward the coast of South America. The El Niño affects different regions differently, with some areas recoding higher than normal precipitation while others experience increased evaporation. During an El Niño, the Pacific's warmest surface waters sit offshore of north-western South America. Normally, warm water pools near Indonesia and the Philippines. Although the southern part of Africa generally receives below-normal rainfall during El Niño years, this cannot be accepted as a rule. El Niños occur every three to five years but may come as frequently as every two years or as rarely as every seven years. Each event usually lasts nine to 12 months. They often begin to form in March/April, reach peak strength between December and January, and then decay by May of the following year. 30

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