Some ward councilors in Gwembe have threatened violence if the government does not immediately address the critical hunger situation in the district.
And some unscrupulous traders have taken advantage of the hunger situation in the district by demanding for a cow, in exchange for five bags of maize.
Speaking when a team of officials from the Disaster Management and Mitigation Unit (DMMU) under the Office of the Vice President paid a courtesy call on him, Acting District Commissioner Mathias Fundi said some civic leaders have threatened to burn down government infrastructure in the area.
Mr. Fundi said the people think by doing so, they would press government to provide food.
He told the DMMU officials that the hunger situation was very a serious.
Mr. Fundi said according to the hunger assessment carried out by a team of DMMU officials, the situation in Gwembe was serious, adding that hunger has since affected all wards in the district..
“The situation is critical, I even received a team of ward councilors who came to my office and threatened to burn houses of government officers if government does not heed to their calls to have the hunger situation addressed,” he said.
Mr. Fundi implored the visiting team of DMMU officials to ensure that they carry out an extensive survey and compile conclusive results that would show the real situation on the ground.
And district co-operatives officer, Emmanuel Mulenga, said the food that was currently available in the district was inadequate.
He added that the 600 bags of maize sourced from the Food Reserve Agency (FRA) in August this year have all been sold out.
“Only 10 per cent of those affected benefited from the sale of maize by FRA and the maize was all sold out within a space of two weeks”, Mr. Mulenga said.
He also observed that the ban on livestock movement has compounded the hunger situation in the district especially that most households were depending on the sale of small ruminants such as goats, pigs, and poultry to buy food.
“The stock movement ban has given rise to illegal movement of animals, from Gwembe district to Turnpike in Kafue through Mazabuka for slaughter, people have resorted to illegal movement of animals as a means of survival,” he noted.
Mr. Mulenga also disclosed that the escalating maize prices has seen the reduction in the number of meals per day for most rural households to only one meal per day, adding that some people have even resorted to eating porridge.
He also pointed out that some unscrupulous traders, mostly from neighbouring Mazabuka, have taken advantage of the escalating maize prices and hunger situation in Gwembe.
He said the traders were exchanging one cow for five 50 kilometers bags of maize.
“Some unscrupulous traders from Mazabuka are giving the local people five bags of maize in exchange for a cow,” he said.
Mr. Mulenga disclosed that a bucket of maize was selling at K35, 000 as compared to the same time last year when the commodity was selling at K20, 000.
And the team leader from the DMMU, Nyambe Namakando, assured the Acting District Commissioner that the team would carry out a rapid food security assessment on the effects of the floods in the last rain season and compile a conclusive report in order to source for help for those affected.
Meanwhile, a check by ZANIS in Chamwe ward revealed that most people were depending on wild fruits such as Masuku and Matondo, while some families have resorted to eating porridge as a way of rationing on the limited maize stocks available.
And a similar check in Syampande ward revealed that most people were surviving on wild seeds locally known as sozwe, which is cooked for three days before it could be eaten because it is said to be highly poisonous.
ZANIS/MZ/KSH/ENDS