Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe has declared a state of disaster in most rural
parts of the country severely hit by a drought.
Declaring a state of disaster allows international
donors to raise money quickly to provide food aid to Zimbabwe, which has
said it will step up imports of the staple maize by buying up to
700,000 tonnes this year to avert hunger.
The Zimbabwean government says 26 percent of the population need food aid.
The southern African nation is still struggling to
overcome a steep 1999-2008 recession that saw its economy contract by
nearly 50 percent.
The worst drought in a quarter of a century is expected to exacerbate its problems.
Saviour Kasukuwere, the local government minister,
said in a statement late on Thursday the former British colony had
received below 75 percent of normal rains, with up to three quarters of
crops failing in some regions.
He also said dam levels were falling, and were at an average capacity of 51 percent.
Zimbabwe's biggest hydro power plant, Kariba, has cut back electricity generation by 62 percent.
"His
Excellency, the President has declared a state of disaster to severely
affected areas in communal and resettlement lands of Zimbabwe effective
from February 2, 2016," Kasukuwere said.
Kasukuwere said the number of people requiring food aid had risen to 2.44 million, which is 26 percent of the population.
The
El Nino weather pattern has brought poor rains to already-parched
southern Africa, hitting crops, including in South Africa, the region's
biggest maize grower.
Zimbabwe has forecast that
the economy would expand by 2.7 percent this year but the World Bank
said on Wednesday the drought and weak global commodity prices would see
growth of 1.5 percent, the same as last year.
Reuters
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