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Charities
lend the elderly a hand
IRIN News
October 02, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=74604
Despite help
from relatives abroad, Zimbabwe's elderly people are struggling
to cope with food shortages and high transport costs, brought on
by an inflation rate of more than 6,000 percent, and a lack of fuel
and foreign exchange that make it difficult for most to obtain even
basic essentials, prompting charities to lend a helping hand.
"Even if
I have [money], where will I get the food I need?" asked Theresa
Malunga, 74, who survives on remittances from her son overseas.
"I wish my son knew what the situation here is like and would
send me food parcels instead."
Louise Campbell
of Supporting Old Aged Pensioners (SOAP), a voluntary organisation
based in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city, commented, "It is
no exaggeration to say that there is virtually no food available
at all." Although vegetables are readily available in supermarkets,
"anything else is a case of 'making a plan', if you have money
and transport," she said.
Empty shelves
in the shops mean the elderly may often have no other option than
to seek help, Campbell said. "We are now finding that people
outside the country are ... [sending] food parcels for their elderly
relatives here. Although they have the money, they are unable to
find food."
SOAP is part
of a network of charity organisations that help pay pensioner's
rates, water, electricity and sewerage bills. "At the moment
we are coping. We don't know for how long, but people have been
kind," said Campbell.
It also helps aged pensioners who cannot survive on their monthly
pensions, which keep dwindling in value: some get less than a US$1
a month. The charity delivers groceries and other basic items like
tea, coffee, cereals, bath and laundry soap, as well as drugs purchased
with donations from well-wishers, to the homes of 170 elderly people
in Bulawayo.
A number of pensioners living in homes for the elderly, but who
do not receive food in these institutions, also benefit. "We
are coping with hope," said Campbell. Some relatives overseas
also send parcels of drugs to bridge the shortage gap for those
who need constant medication.
Prices
keep going up
According to
a situation report by the United States Aid agency (USAID) this
week, Zimbabwe is increasingly unable to provide the fuel and maintain
the infrastructure necessary for agricultural production, water
and sanitation services, and power facilities.
Last month,
the Central Statistical Office (CSO) reported that inflation had
slowed to around 6,500 percent in August, from a peak of about 7,300
percent a few months before.
A few commodities
are slowly finding their way back onto city shop shelves after government
ended price controls in August. Some shops stock imported products
like milk formulas, chocolates, detergents and tinned foods, all
from neighbouring South Africa and Botswana.
But the prices,
denominated in the fickle parallel market exchange rate for the
South African rand, are way out of reach for most. According to
a USAID-funded Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) report,
most staple foods can only be found in the informal market at prices
beyond levels the majority of the population can afford.
"As a result
of the poor October 2006 to March 2007 agricultural season, families
in the most drought-affected areas of western and southern Zimbabwe
have depleted household food stocks, and have limited access to
the markets due to high staple food prices," report said.
In meantime,
pensioners like Malunga rely on cross-border traders to bring them
basic commodities from Botswana or South Africa.
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