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Short
lives lead to short-term goals in Zimbabwe
Ryan
Truscott, The Christian Science Monitor
June 09, 2006
The average
life span for Zimbabweans has declined sharply in recent years,
according to a recent report.
MUTARE, ZIMBABWE
– Brian Mutenda is an energetic 30-year-old with a vision.
He wants to
establish a flea market on the outskirts of his home city of Mutare,
on Zimbabwe's border with Mozambique.
The best thing
about his flea market project is that it won't take years to set
up.
"A flea market
is not a long-term thing," he explains. "Anything that would take
me three, four, or five years [to establish] - I'm not very comfortable
with, because at the back of the mind you say: 'At 40, I'll be no
more.' "
Life is short
here, and that's official.
According to
the 2006 World Health Report, published recently by the World Health
Organization (WHO), Zimbabwean men on average can expect to live
only to age 37. In the past 12 months, life expectancy for women
plummeted by two years to 34, the shortest in the world.
Behind the statistics
is a grim tale of AIDS, financial hardship, and stress. But it wasn't
always this way in what was once one of the most prosperous countries
on the continent. Between 1970 and 1975, Zimbabweans could expect
to live to the age of 56. The sharp decline in life expectancy has
drastically changed the outlook and aspirations of people here.
As a teenager,
Mutenda dreamed of being "a managing director, or a company executive.
I dreamed of myself in a high-backed chair," he says.
But now he and
his friends are only too aware their lives might soon be over. So
they plan accordingly.
"With all my
friends, this is the trend. Those who had money or those who had
parents who are well-off, they have decided to buy [liquor] stores
so that they will have quick cash."
The low life
expectancy has a host of negative effects on Zimbabwean society,
says Eldred Masunungure, the executive director of the Harare-based
Mass Public Opinion
Institute.
He says young
people are less committed to the companies they work for.
"Why invest
energy in the development and growth of an organisation you're not
likely to be a part of in 14 years' time?" he asks.
Older people
can remember when things were different. Retired teacher Gilbert
Rondozai, 79, says he believes a rise in crime and promiscuity is
a result of young people's lack of hope.
"Everybody says
they can't control the young. They're drunks and promiscuous. And
crime. It was never known in my growing-up time that you'd have
burglar bars over your windows," he says.
Mr. Rondozai's
father lived to age 110. Six of his nine siblings are still alive.
"We lived long
compared to today," says Rondozai. For young people now, it's "live
today, live tomorrow, what happens after that is of no consequence,"
he says.
The World Health
Report says the decline is mainly due to the effects of a devastating
HIV/AIDS pandemic, which kills more than 3,000 people here every
week.
But Mr. Masunungure
says that growing poverty may also play a part. "Dealing with poverty
is the government's responsibility," he says. But "government is
broke."
Once-thriving
Zimbabwe is battling its worst-ever economic crisis. Inflation topped
1,000 percent in April, and has gone up since. Fuel is in short
supply. So are medical drugs, machinery supplies, and foreign currency.
Shoppers are now used to seeing food prices go up nearly every day.
But there are
glimmers of hope.
In the working-class
town of Chitungwiza, the Girl
Child Network Trust is working with young women to help them
build longer lives.
Zimbabwean girls
up to the age of 18 are highly vulnerable to HIV infection because
they fall victim to sexual abuse, and early marriages, and they
lack knowledge about their rights, says Betty Makoni, the director
of the group, which oversees 350 clubs countrywide with a combined
membership of 20,000. The clubs meet regularly to discuss self-empowerment
strategies. Schoolgirls are taught to stand up for their rights
- and hopefully, avoid HIV infection.
"The more we
empower them, the more they speak out," explains Ms. Makoni. "If
we don't start with this girl, the woman we're talking about will
be lost."
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