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ZIMBABWE:
No free lunch, but avocados are cheap
IRIN
News
May 13, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=41041
HARARE - Angeline
Guhwa, a secretary at a legal firm in Harare, used to have burgers for
lunch, or even a hotel meal. Now, like so many other Zimbabweans working
in the capital, she often has no more than a couple of avocados: healthy,
nutritious - and above all - cheap.
From construction workers to middle managers, avocados mashed into buns
are the new fast food. With greasy burgers and cholesterol-laden meat
pies cut from people's diets, the University of Zimbabwe has hailed the
fad.
"The avocado pear works very well as a spread that can replace jam or
margarine. They are very nutritious, and very good for good health," said
a lecturer at the department of food sciences.
But for Guhwa, a mother of two, the health benefits are secondary. "I
can no longer afford to buy decent food for lunch, and that is why I buy
the cheaper avocados and buns - at least, for all this I pay Zim $1,900
(US 35 cents) - a bun costs (Zim) $350 each, while an avocado pear goes
for (Zim) $500," she told IRIN.
A standard lunch at a decent food outlet currently costs a minimum of
$12,000 (US $2) - well beyond the reach of most Zimbabweans struggling
with an inflation rate of over 600 percent and 70 percent unemployment.
"The price of bread went up last week, as did those of most basic commodities.
Life is becoming unbearable for ordinary workers like us," said Guhwa.
"I don't know what I will eat when the avocado pear season ends."
The Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) has criticised manufacturers for
price increases and called on the government to reintroduce the subsidies
for basic commodities that were removed last year as part of the recovery
programme.
Price fixing caused the parallel market to balloon, and left producers
complaining that the retail price cap did not take into account their
inflation-linked input costs.
Unlicensed vendors are trying to cash in on the demand for cheaper fast
food among urban Zimbabweans, raising disquiet in a country where hygiene
laws were once strictly enforced.
"My main concern is to have all my food sold out. I need money and I need
to survive. The issue of hygiene is secondary - as long as people buy
my food," one unregistered vendor at Harare's Speke bus terminus told
IRIN.
The Harare City Council's department of health has now begun to tackle
the problem, closing down unlicensed outlets and fining the vendors, but
an official said it was an uphill struggle. "It appears as if we are fighting
a losing battle, because you arrest them today and you see them back on
the streets the next day."
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