HARARE (Reuters) - More than half of Zimbabwe's population, suffering under a severe economic and political crisis, will need food aid in February and March, the World Food Programme said on Thursday.
The WFP said in a statement that it aims to assist 5.1 million people in February while a group of U.S.-sponsored aid organisations plans to assist 1.8 million more people in the southern African country.
"The overall total for people in need of assistance in February and March is around 7 million," the WFP said.
Zimbabwe's economic meltdown has been worsened by a cholera outbreak which has killed nearly 3,100 people and infected 58,993 across the country -- the worst death toll in Africa from an outbreak of the normally preventable disease in 15 years.
A power-sharing agreement reached in September between Zimbabwe's political rivals, seen as a chance to ease the humanitarian crisis and save the faltering economy, has yet to be implemented.
The United Nations said on Thursday unemployment was 94 percent. Food and fuel are in short supply. The last official inflation rate, for July 2008, was 231 million percent.