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ZAMBIA-ZIMBABWE:
Knocking on doors in desperation
IRIN News
August 23, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55245
SIAVONGA - Every
day, Tracey Zulu walks from Zimbabwe into Zambia and sets up a stall
selling baking powder, nuts, tomato sauce sachets and biscuits.
On a good day she can make a US$2 profit; on a bad day she makes
nothing at all.
Her economic decline
mirrors Zimbabwe's. "Once, I had a powerful business selling expensive
duvets, blankets and clothes," the 48-year-old mother of four said.
"Everything is gone and I can't even have a decent meal."
Zimbabwe's economy
is in free-fall: inflation is hovering at around an annual rate
of 1,000 percent and unemployment levels are more than 70 percent.
As a result, cross-border
traffic has risen dramatically, from about 40 vehicles and 30-odd
people a day, said a Zambian immigration official, to more than
300 small traders and 200 vehicles.
The Zimbabwean
government tries to discourage this by introducing specific regulations.
Zimbabwean traders are limited at the Kariba border post to carrying
only US$10 worth of customs-free goods, in contrast to the international
norm of US$250.
On the Zimbabwean
side of the border, soldiers search traders to make them abide by
the letter of the law. "If I carried more goods, I would have to
declare them at the border with proof of receipts," Zulu said.
This keeps her
profit margins negligible. "Because of limiting the cash flow, two
of my children have now stopped going to school because I can't
raise enough money to pay for their fees," she said.
Sometimes traders
increase their earnings by smuggling alcohol, but "Zimbabwe alcohol
is very strong and when our people begin to consume it, cases of
violence and thefts begin to rise in Siavonga", a Zambia Revenue
Authority official said. Zambia taxes Zimbabwean alcohol heavily.
In Siavonga, traders
knock on people's doors, their desperation further eroding their
already puny profits. "They will keep on begging me to buy and reducing
the price further," said Milimo Mudenda, a Zambian government worker.
Zimbabwe's economic
meltdown has changed the flow of people across the border. In the
past, it used to be Zambians who bought cheap groceries in Zimbabwe.
Now, Zimbabweans go to Zambia to buy basics such as detergents,
cooking oil and salt.
"We also buy anti-malaria
tablets from the chemists here, because in Zimbabwe we must have
a doctor's prescription to buy any medicine," Zulu said.
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