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Mozambique-Zimbabwe: The commodities lifeline
IRIN News
September 11, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80305
It is 7 a.m. at the main
long-distance bus terminus in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare. The roof-rack
of a battered 75-seater bus is piled high with goods, from bales
of dried tobacco leaves to reed mats, in preparation for the 24-hour
journey southeast to the town of Sango, in Chiredzi district on
the Mozambican border.
"We go to the Sango
border every Wednesday morning and if we travel without any problems
we arrive there early on Thursday morning. It is a long journey
of over 500 kilometres," a bus conductor for the Mukumba Brothers
transport company, who declined to be named, told IRIN.
"The luggage we
are carrying belongs to traders, who are going to sell their goods
in Mozambique. On our return trip the bus is equally loaded on top
and inside with rice, cooking oil, food and other things such as
soap that most traders bring back," the conductor said.
Mukumba Brothers is one
of several bus companies plying the Harare-Chiredzi route, which
is not as well known as the Harare-Mutare route to the eastern border,
but a busy trading route all the same.
The bus, crammed with
passengers perched between bags and bundles, leaves Harare two hours
late, only to stop for another hour in Willowvale, a light industrial
area on the city limits, where drums of scarce diesel is poured
into the tank while mechanics carry out last-minute checks on the
vehicle.
The bus finally begins
its journey in earnest in the midday heat, but Mervis Chiuto, a
cross-border trader and mother of three, is not concerned about
the delays.
"I have been selling
reed mats in Mozambique for many years and I have been using this
route for a long time. This road from Harare to the border is long,
but once you cross into the Mozambican side it is easy to travel
because there is a cheap train that goes to [the Mozambican capital]
Maputo. That is the one I have been using all these years,"
Chiuto told IRIN.
"I sent my children
to school through cross-border trade. Now they are married, but
I still continue buying and selling things because the cost of life
in Zimbabwe is now very expensive and you need to work. My son is
a teacher but I also look after him, because his salary can't buy
even a bar of soap," she said.
"People used [to
use] the Mutare route to Mozambique because there is a better road,
but life has worsened in Zimbabwe and in the past two years I have
seen the number of people using the Sango border increase. More
people have been buying food such as rice and sugar for their families,
and for resale back home [in Zimbabwe]."
Lifeline
Zimbabwe's economic meltdown
has left few people in the country untouched. Unemployment is above
80 percent, annual inflation is officially estimated at more than
11 million percent, and shortages of basic foods, electricity, fuel
and potable water are commonplace.
More than three million
people, a third of the population, are believed to have left for
neighbouring countries or have gone even further afield to Europe
and Australia in search of work, and many remit money to their relatives
trying to eke out a living in Zimbabwe.
The widespread shortages,
which the UN predicts will see more than five million people requiring
food assistance by early 2009, has resulted in a huge increase in
cross-border trading.
"I am on my way
to Maputo to buy sports shoes and labels for resale back in Zimbabwe.
I do this once every month. Some other times I also come back with
packets of rice when I can carry them," Tapiwa Chimombe, another
trader, told IRIN.
Chimombe graduated from
a "good" Harare school in 2000 after passing his A Levels,
but turned to cross-border trading when he could not find work in
the formal sector. He said many other young men who had worked in
banks or as technicians had given up their formal jobs and become
traders "because a white-collar job no longer pays in Zimbabwe".
"You find that most
of the women who have been using this route know each other, and
the same goes for most of us young people as well. After a few months
of doing this you start to recognise familiar faces."
The familiarity of the
passengers makes conversations come easily, albeit in hushed tones,
about the recent elections and the ongoing talks between President
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party and Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
"Like most of the
passengers in here I paid R150 (US$19) for this trip because it
is easier to pay for things in Zimbabwe with [South African] rands
than with local currency. The bus companies prefer payment in foreign
currency rather than in Zimbabwe dollars and this is a sign that
things are not good, and we need ZANU-PF and MDC to reach an agreement
soon or there will be no future for our children," Chimombe
said.
The final 180km to the
Mozambican border, which skirts the Gonarezhou National Park, is
on dirt roads. "In the next few months, when the rain season
begins, this dust road becomes a hazard. Buses fail to navigate
the dust road so some of the companies withdraw their buses, and
truck drivers charge us exorbitant fees to transport our goods,"
Chiuto commented.
Sango
border
The bus arrives at Sango
in the early hours of the morning. The Zimbabwe-Mozambique border
is demarcated by two red-brick buildings that house officials from
the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA) and the department of immigration.
In the half-light of
dawn there is already a queue waiting for the border to open at
6 a.m. People are sleeping on the pavements, using their luggage
as pillows; a few of the women comfort young children while others
wait to use a single tap to wash.
A few of the travelling
women had toddlers with them.
Thursday is the busiest
day of the week for immigration officials on both sides of the border
because the train comes from Maputo and the long-distance buses
arrive from Harare.
Good news is always a
rare commodity, but today there is some. "With effect from
today ZIMRA has increased the amount of foods that can be imported
from Mozambique without being charged duty," an immigration
officer tells the gathering crowd.
"You are now allowed
to bring in up two 200 kilograms of rice and no duty will be charged
[a fourfold increase on the previous limit of 50 kilograms]; the
amount of cooking oil you can bring through the border is now 100
litres [double the previous amount of 50 litres]."
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