|
Back to Index
No
foreign currency, no food
IRIN
News
July 08, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79149
A R100 (US$13)
remittance from a relative living in South Africa was a lifeline
to food for Lydia Nxumalo, 36, and her family in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's
second city.
After searching in vain
for maize-meal in the shops and supermarkets, Nxumalo, with her
five-year-old daughter in tow, eventually managed to buy a 10kg
bag of the staple food from a vendor at the bus terminus.
"This bag of mealie-meal
[maize-meal] will only last me a week and then I will need to purchase
some more to feed my family, but where am I going to get the foreign
currency to buy the mealie-meal? It is too expensive," Nxumalo
told IRIN.
Maize-meal is no longer
available from formal businesses, and for many the only recourse
is the informal market, but while the illegal market thrives and
maize is available in abundance, it is sold only for foreign currency.
The price varies, depending on the dealer, from US$10 to US$13 for
a 10kg bag. Officially a 10kg bag of mealie-meal costs Z$15 billion
(US$0.40).
Other basic commodities,
such as cooking oil, sugar and bread, are also only available on
the informal market, but vendors charge for these in the currency
of neighboring South Africa and Botswana.
Since 2000, more than
three million Zimbabweans are believed to have left the country
in response to the economic meltdown, which independent economists
believe now has an annual inflation rate somewhere between one million
percent and 10 million percent, and unemployment of more than 80
percent. Zimbabwe's currency is fast becoming obsolete as more and
more traders demand foreign currency for their goods.
Ahead of the 27 June
presidential run-off vote - from which the leader of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, Morgan Tsvangirai, withdrew in protest
over the widespread violence - the incumbent, ZANU-PF leader Robert
Mugabe, promised to import 600,000mt of maize.
Half was said to be sourced
from South Africa, and half from Zambia and Malawi; however, the
maize does not appear to have found its way to the streets.
Playing
politics
"President
Mugabe is playing politics with our stomachs. Before the elections
he said a lot of maize will be arriving in the country from South
Africa and three weeks down the line we are still waiting for the
maize. He should stop politicking and make sure the maize comes
in before people die of hunger," said Martin Ndlovu, a resident
of Bulawayo's Makokoba township.
"We are tired of
politicians playing around with our lives. What we need right now
is food, and President Mugabe should stop lying to us. If there
is no maize and mealie-meal available, he should say so," Ndlovu
said.
For those Zimbabweans
who cannot rely on relatives or friends to remit money to them from
other countries, a 10kg bag of mealie-meal costs the equivalent
of a month's wages for those who still have a job.
"The shortage of
mealie-meal is so intense we are spending weeks without eating any
sadza [a thick porridge cooked from maize-meal], said Nhalnhla Sibanda,
a self employed cobbler. He told IRIN he had last bought mealie-meal
two months ago on the informal market, but could no longer afford
it.
"People in the townships
are now relying on sweet potatoes and vegetables for survival, but
the price of those is also going up daily," he said.
"Everyone is charging
in South African rands and in Botswana pula for basic commodities
- where do these people expect us to get the foreign currency from?"
Sibanda asked, hammering at a shoe.
"We are waiting
with bated breath for the maize promised by President Mugabe, because
if it does not come soon we will all die of hunger. Let us hope
it is not one of those campaign gimmicks President Mugabe has used
in all elections to woo voters to vote for his party," Sibanda
said.
Cain Mathema, the governor
of Bulawayo, dismissed the belief that Mugabe's promised maize imports
were being distributed to ZANU-PF supporters. "The government
is committed to feeding all Zimbabweans, irrespective of political
affiliation, and we are currently awaiting maize supplies from South
Africa, Zambia and Malawi.
"That maize [import]
has been paid for ... We are aware that the black [informal] market
is selling maize and mealie-meal at exorbitant prices," he
said.
Mathema said the government
had introduced a ward-based food distribution programme, in which
basic commodities were sold at government-controlled prices, but
residents claim the system is only benefiting supporters of Mugabe,
who came to power in 1980 after the country won its independence
from Britain.
"The ward-based
food programme benefits ZANU-PF supporters, and what they sell is
not enough for everyone, and supply is erratic," a city resident
who declined to be identified, told IRIN.
In the lead-up to the 27 June ballot, the government ordered non-governmental
organisations involved in humanitarian assistance, including food
distribution, to suspend their activities.
The Food and Agricultural
Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) Crop and Food
Supply Assessment Mission to Zimbabwe projected in its forecast,
released in June 2008, that about 5.1 million Zimbabweans will suffer
food insecurity.
"The Mission estimates
that 2.04 million people in rural and urban areas will be food insecure
between July and September 2008, rising to 3.8 million people between
October [and December] and peaking to about 5.1 million at the height
of the hungry season between January and March 2009."
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|