Zimbabwe

In Zimbabwe, Oxfam's focus is on sustainable livelihoods, health, and helping poor people to have enough food in times of need.
Update: Oxfam suspends operations in Zimbabwe
Coping with instability
Hyper-inflation, the impact of HIV and AIDS, and the decline in recent years of commercial farm production, have all led to a widespread lack of food and other essential items across Zimbabwe.
- The official inflation rate, at over 100,000 per cent, is the highest in the world
- 1.8 million people are living with HIV and AIDS
The livelihoods of Zimbabwe’s population are under threat. Unemployment rates of 85 per cent and reduced earning opportunities are forcing many people to resort to selling their assets to survive.
Find out more about Oxfam's response to the Zimbabwe Food Crisis
How Oxfam is helping
We help people build and maintain ways of making a living that can withstand the current instability. We provide training to farmers to help them maximise their yields and work with families affected by HIV and AIDS to provide support and treatment.
Oxfam's other work in Zimbabwe
- Providing health education to encourage good hygiene practices
- Running seed fairs to promote local trade and support the local economy
- Providing a ‘safety net’ for the most vulnerable families by distributing food vouchers during the traditional lean seasons
Learn more
Read more examples of our work in Zimbabwe:
Oxfam's work in Zimbabwe in depth
DFID (Department for International Development) and OFDA (The Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance) are funding partners of Oxfam in Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe Food Crisis - 2007
An estimated 4.1 million Zimbabweans will not have access to food between September 2007 and April 2008.
Southern Africa Food Crisis
Both in 2001-3 and in 2005-6, millions of people across southern Africa faced acute food shortages.
In both instances we expanded our work in the region – covering Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe – to reach more people affected by the crisis.
A recurrent problem
Food crises in southern Africa are not unpredictable – drought comes in cycles. However, even in a year of good rains millions of poor farmers simply cannot produce a decent harvest because they can't afford seeds and fertilisers.
Without long-term investment in people's livelihoods, millions of people will continue to be vulnerable to drought. Oxfam works to help improve the food security of communities across the region to bring an end to this cyclical crisis.
Learn more
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