Source: Resilience building programme benefits 50 000 | Sunday News (local news)
Leonard Ncube in Victoria Falls
MORE than 50 000 households in Binga, Kariba and Mbire districts have benefitted from a resilience building programme initiative by various partners working with Government to address food insecurity and poverty.
Six years ago, Action Aid and partners Zimbabwe Environmental Law Association, Afro Soft Holdings, Africa Breeders Services Total Cattle Management with support from Government started a resilience building programme called Zimbabwe Resilience Building Fund-Zambezi Valley Association (ZRBF-ZVA) targeting 45 105 households in the three drought prone districts.
In Binga the programme was implemented in all the 25 wards and reached out to 25 323 households compared to the targeted 21 771 households.
The overarching objective of the programme was to increase absorptive, adaptive and transformative capacities of the targeted; rural communities by building resilience of the individuals, households and communities as well as protecting development gains and achieving improved well-being in time of shocks and stresses in a sustainable manner.
The objectives were to be achieved through several activities around crop production, livestock, business linkages, disaster risk management, productive infrastructure and gender cross cutting issues.
Action Aid handed over the projects at the end of the programme cycle at a function held at Mandimoni Crop and Livestock Innovation Centre, one of the facilities built through the programme in Binga recently.
Action Aid Zimbabwe country director Mr Joy Mabenge said the ZRBF-ZVA programme has managed to increase average monthly household income by 68 percent from US$57 to US$96 comparing the 2020 and 2021 periods.
He said food insecurity also decreased from 65.4 percent in 2019 to 50.7 percent in 2020.
The achievements are a result of significant strides registered in communities with small holder farmers adopting agro-ecological practices that have helped increase yields, and the households that practiced agro-ecological farming had 83 percent higher yields in small grains compared to provincial averages.
Mr Mabenge said the programme built two crops and livestock innovation centres in Siabuwa and Sinamagonde, a nutrition centre in Chaflwe, rehabilitated seven dip tanks and built another in Chitongo, drilled three boreholes and rehabilitated eight others and rehabilitated four piped water schemes in Mswazi, Chasamba, Chibila and Sinansengwe.
Four poultry brooders were set up in Tinde, Sianzyundu, Siabuwa and Sinamagonde, and 30 water troughs constructed around the district.
Two seedbanks were set up in Mandimoni and Siabuwa, three goat feedlots in Mushumbi, Mahuwe and Sapa and two feedlots in in Mandimoni and Siabuwa.
The programme also facilitated genetic improvement of livestock through artificial insemination and introduction of exotic Kalahari and Boer goat breeds, and from 2019 to date, 10 415 goat kids were born.
The communities were also assisted with incubators to increase poultry production and also helped with value addition and improved market linkages through pen fattening.
Communities were also trained in technological innovation through drip system for irrigation, water harvesting, and greenhouse nursery establishment.
Mr Mabenge said the communities were capacitated with financial inclusion as a safety net through public-private sector partnerships.
“The ZRBF-ZVA targeted 41 105 households and I am happy that the project has managed to reach 53 589 households through various interventions with 45 percent being female headed households in the three districts.
“The goal of the programme is to increase of communities to protect development gains and achieve improved well-being outcomes in the face of shocks and stresses through a set of interrelated activities,” said Mr Mabenge.
He added: “I believe that the relevant line Ministries and communities at large will continue using these physical assets and knowledge to surely bounce back when affected by shocks and stresses.”
Minister of State for Matabeleland North Provincial Affairs and Devolution Cde Richard Moyo who was guest of honour at the hand-over of the projects, said ZRBF-ZVA is a long-term sustainable development programme which is contributing to increased capacity of community members to adopt and adapt to the recurrent shocks and stresses, enabling communities to contribute to the socio-economic development of Zimbabwe in line with the National Development Strategy (NDS1).
“The ZRBF programme has been very pivotal in the district’s resilience building which is witnessed through the collaborative efforts with Government structures such as Agritex, Department of Veterinary Science, Ministry of Health and Child Care and Ministry of Women Affairs among many others,” said Cde Moyo.
He said this is in sync with Government efforts such as Intwasa/Pfumvudza Conservation Farming, which has enabled communities to absorb climate change induced shocks by embracing the transformative power of agroecology.
“Resilience programming shifts the balance of effort and resources from short term humanitarian assistance efforts towards a contribution of disaster risk management, climate change adaptation, livelihoods diversification and long-term institutional development.
“On behalf of the Government of Zimbabwe I would like to take this opportunity to honour the good work done by the ZRBF-ZVA. The focus on promoting asset creation to build resilience of our Binga communities is life changing and one we will continue to support as Government,” he said while urging the Binga community to safeguard the infrastructure for sustainable development.–@ncubeleon