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Two
wheels go where four cannot
IRIN News
February 18, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76810
Bulawayo - The
road is uphill for most of the 15km, but if Masikosana Ngulube wants
to get to school each morning in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city,
she has no other option but to get on her bike.
A bus ride is out of
the question. What was once cheap and unremarkable is now a luxury
for families on ever-shrinking budgets, instead, mass transportation
increasingly means two wheels and pedal power.
"Things have changed
so much - I never thought I would be forced to ride to school,"
said Masikosana, 14, attending her first year at Evelyn Girls' High
School on the outskirts of the city in the southern province of
Matabeleland North.
At dawn each
morning she teams up with three boys from her neighbourhood in a
mini cycling club. "The boys are a great help when one of my
wheels punctures or the chain comes unstuck," said Masikosana.
She keeps a tube of gum and patches among the books in her satchel.
Her companions leave Masikosana at the gates of her school before
heading up the road to Milton Boys' High.
"Cycling
keeps her fit," quipped Claire Ngulube, Masikosana's mother,
before adding: "It's the only way she can get to school with
these frequent increases in fees and unpredictable hikes in bus
fares."
Ngulube, who runs a dressmaking
shop in the city, said she was lucky that her other two children
were still in primary school and could walk just a short distance
to get to class.
Masikosana is less than
keen on having to make the daily 30-km round trip between school
and home. "The bike gives me problems because of its condition.
I often get to school tired and am unable to concentrate,"
she told IRIN. Her return journey is easier, as it is mostly downhill.
"I take my time because I am not under pressure, unlike in
the morning when I have to be on time for lessons."
Ngulube said
sending Masikosana to boarding school was not an alternative to
her cycling marathon because of the food shortages pupils often
suffer. Zimbabwean boarding schools are also notorious for demanding
unbudgeted mid-term "top up" fees to restock empty pantries
as a result of galloping inflation, which in December 2007 officially
hit 66,212 percent.
The continued depreciation
of the Zimbabwean dollar against major currencies on the parallel
market has also driven up fuel prices. A litre of petrol costs Zim$12
million (US$3 on the parallel market), up from Zim$6 million (US$1.60)
late last year. Commuters are now forced to fork out Zim$3 million
(just under a dollar) for an average trip - three times more than
they paid just before Christmas.
Minibus-taxi operator
Sidney Gurura denied that the vehicle owners were exploiting the
situation, and said they themselves were victims of the fuel price.
"If we don't raise fares we will go bust and stop operating."
Informal fuel traders
who import from Botswana have filled the supply gap left by the
state-run National Oil Company of Zimbabwe (NOCZIM), which has failed
to import adequate supplies due to a long-standing foreign currency
crunch.
Second-hand goods trader
Rasheed Mohammed is not complaining. Since schools opened in January
he has been pestered by parents trying to get their hands on bikes
for their children.
"Anything on two
wheels with a frame is snapped up as soon as we receive it,"
Mohammed said. "New bicycles are beyond their reach and few
people are letting go of bicycles they already have because they
are handy during the current fuel crisis."
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