/ 15 June 2004

Mugabe ‘snubs’ top food aid official

A visit to Zimbabwe scheduled for Tuesday by James Morris, the United Nation’s top food aid official, has been called off, UN officials said, in a sign of worsening relations between President Robert Mugabe’s government and the world body.

James Morris, executive director of the World Food Programme, had Zimbabwe on his itinerary for a visit arranged months ago to five Southern African countries, but a UN spokesperson in Harare said on Tuesday the visit had been “postponed”.

“Unfortunately, due to a cabinet meeting, no government officials are likely to be able to meet with the special envoy,” the spokesperson said.

Meetings with “key government representatives” were an essential part of its consultations in Zimbabwe. Morris, also UN secretary-general Kofi Annan’s special humanitarian envoy to Southern Africa, would be going to Malawi on Tuesday instead.

“It’s a deliberate snub,” said a Western diplomat. “Zimbabwe had agreed to the visit, and Morris was set down to see Mugabe. Late last week, they changed their minds.”

The calling off of Morris’ visit occurred amid controversy over the government’s refusal to allow UN famine relief operations to continue for the third year in a row this year, despite widespread forecasts that crop output would again fall far below the volume needed to feed the country’s 12-million people.

Last month, Mugabe said the UN was “foisting” food on the country.

“We are not hungry,” he said. “We don’t want to be choked.”

Since 2002, the United Nations has helped avert massive starvation as it delivered food to up to five million people at a time. Zimbabwe was Africa’s second biggest food producer, after South Africa, until 2000 when the country’s agricultural industry began to collapse as a result of the illegal, violent state seizure of nearly all of the highly productive farmland owned by white farmers. – Sapa-DPA

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