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Basic Facts about Zimbabwe



Most recent data

Previously

Population

12.2 million people (Central Statistical Office Population Projection 2008)

13.2 million (UNFPA 2000)

Under-five mortality

Maternal mortality

82 p/1,000 (Zimbabwe Demographic Health Survey (ZDHS) 2005/6)

555/100,000 (ZDHS 2005/6)

105 p/1,000 (UNICEF)

Life expectancy

41.7 years (UNDP Human Development Report [HDR]

Indices A Statistical Update 2008)

43 years (World Bank; World  Development Indicators)

Prevalence of under-nourishment in total population

47% (Human Development Report 2007/08)

45%

Gross national income per capita

$340 (World Bank Key Development Data & Statistics 2005)

$450

Percentage of population living on less than l dollar per day

56.1% (UNDP Human Development Report (HDR) 2007/08)

36% (UNDP HDR 2002)

Proportion of population without sustainable access to an improved drinking water source

40% (Zimbabwe Government & UNICEF 2006)

20% (World Bank World  Development Indicators)

IDPs (number and percent of population)

Figure not known

Figure not known

Refugees

In-country

5,054 (UNHCR Zimbabwe 2008)

4,127 (UNHCR Statistical Online Population Database)

  Abroad

12,782 (UNHCR Statistical Online Population Database)

109 (UNHCR Statistical Online Population Database)

ECHO Vulnerability and Crisis Index score (V/C)

3/3 (most severe rank)

-

2OO6 UNDP Human Development Index score

HDI score of 0.513: 151st out of 177/medium human development (2007/2008 HDR)

HDI score of 0.551: 128th of 173/medium human development (2002 HDR)

HIV prevalence among adults (l5-49 years)

15.6% (Ministry of Health and Child Welfare, 2007)

-

Information gathered from UN Office for the Coordination Of Humanitarian Affairs

http://ochaonline.un.org/humanitarianappeal/webpage.asp?Page=1715

Facts: World Food Programme in Zimbabwe

(information from the United Nations)

The food situation in Zimbabwe has deteriorated more drastically than expected – due to worsening economic conditions, the cash crisis and also because the government did not import as much food as anticipated.   While critical, it is not a “famine” (there are no mass deaths, no mass migration). February and March are the two hungriest, most difficult months of the year – before the main harvest in April.

·    WFP aims to provide food assistance to 5.1 million people across Zimbabwe in February - the highest number of beneficiaries in a single month since the regional crisis began in 2002. In January, WFP assisted 4.3 million people.

·    In order to reach as many people as possible, WFP has been forced to cut cereal rations from 12 kg to 5kg per person per month.

·    Reduced rations will help millions of hungry people to survive until the April harvest but they will be more vulnerable and more susceptible to disease

·    C-SAFE, three US-sponsored NGOs which also distribute free food assistance in Zimbabwe, will assist another 1.8 million beneficiaries – taking the total to around 7 million in February and March (over 50% of the population of 12 million.)

·    Cholera patients have received WFP food in treatment centres.  A daily ration of 400 g of cereal, 100 g of beans and 20 g of vegetable oil provides some 20,000 patients with nutrition to speed their recovery.

·    Donors have been generous to WFP in Zimbabwe – providing more than US$240 million for operations in 2008 and 2009. The UK has given $17.8 million; other recent donations include USA ($33 million), China ($5 million), Russia ($2 million).

·    In the worst affected communities, people are surviving on reduced food aid rations and wild foods – as well as resorting to other desperate measures such as selling remaining household assets or using tree bark or soil as a cereal supplement.  Soon people may be forced to start consuming “green maize” (picking it far too early).

·    A recent WFP survey found that nearly one in five households – including those receiving food assistance – had sold assets in the past three months and that more than 70% had done so in order to buy food;  12% of households had not eaten the previous day. 

(http://www.wfp.org/stories/wfp-facts-and-figures-zimbabwe)

Country profile: Zimbabwe

The fortunes of Zimbabwe have for almost three decades been tied to President Robert Mugabe, the pro-independence campaigner who wrested control from a small white community and became the country's first black leader. Until the 2008 parliamentary elections, Zimbabwe was effectively a one-party state, ruled over by Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF. A power-sharing deal has raised hopes that Mr Mugabe might be prepared to relinquish some of his powers, but in the meantime he presides over a nation whose economy is in tatters, where poverty and unemployment are endemic and political strife and repression commonplace.

Zimbabwe is home to the Victoria Falls, one of the natural wonders of the world, the stone enclosures of Great Zimbabwe - remnants of a past empire - and to herds of elephant and other game roaming vast stretches of wilderness.

AT-A-GLANCE

·  Politics: President Robert Mugabe, in office since 1980, agreed to an historic power-sharing deal with the opposition in September 2008, following months of political turmoil

·  Economy: Economy in crisis, with rampant inflation, "de-industrialisation" and shortages of food and fuel. Agricultural production is shrinking

·  International: Hopes that political deal will alleviate international isolation

For years it was a major tobacco producer and a potential bread basket for surrounding countries.

But the forced seizure of almost all white-owned commercial farms, with the stated aim of benefiting landless black Zimbabweans, led to sharp falls in production and precipitated the collapse of the agriculture-based economy. The country has endured rampant inflation and critical food and fuel shortages.

Many Zimbabweans survive on grain handouts. Others have voted with their feet; hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans, including much-needed professionals, have emigrated.

Aid agencies and critics partly blame food shortages on the land reform programme. The government blames a long-running drought, and Mr Mugabe has accused Britain and its allies of sabotaging the economy in revenge for the redistribution programme.

The government's urban slum demolition drive in 2005 drew more international condemnation. The president said it was an effort to boost law and order and development; critics accused him of destroying slums housing opposition supporters.

Either way, the razing of "illegal structures" left some 700,000 people without jobs or homes, according to UN estimates.

The former Rhodesia has a history of conflict, with white settlers dispossessing the resident population, guerrilla armies forcing the white government to submit to elections, and the post-independence leadership committing atrocities in southern areas where it lacked the support of the Matabele people.

Zimbabwe has had a rocky relationship with the Commonwealth - it was suspended after President Mugabe's controversial re-election in 2002 and later announced that it was pulling out for good.