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House
of hunger in Zimbabwe
International
Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)
By Tapiwa Gomo in Harare, Zimbabwe
November
04, 2005
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/RMOI-6HW4Z9?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe
"I am old now,
my body is now tired and I need rest. But I have no option but to
continue working for my family," says Emilda Chionika, 54, of Bindura,
north east of Harare.
"I am the only
person, who can still work for my family," she says, while finding
a place underneath a tree away from the scorching sun.
Six o'clock
in the morning every day finds Emilda working in her field, about
seven kilometers away from her home in the urban township of Chipadze.
"Last year was
a bad year for us as we did not have enough rain. I only harvested
four bags of maize which only lasted us only three months," she
said, wiping sweat from her face.
"From May this
year we have been surviving on donations from well-wishers but these
days no one is willing to give us anything as they themselves do
not have enough to feed their families. We sometimes look for wild
foods to supplement what we have."
Emilda's face
is lined with worry. Besides her back-breaking farm work, she is
now faced with looking after her three adult daughters, who are
all HIV-positive. She has been staying with them for the past three
years but until now, the harvests were good enough to sustain the
family food requirements.
"Most of the
time when I am in the field, I am worried about my children at home.
Sometimes all three of them are bedridden, and I have to go back
home in the afternoon to prepare porridge for them and that takes
away my productive time in the field."
Two of them
are currently on their feet but not fit enough to work in the field.
"I also stay
with ten grandchildren in the same house and this is why I have
to work extra hard."
The treatment
that Emilda's daughters get requires them to have adequate food
but there is little in the house for them and the young children.
It is not only a house of hunger. Despair is beginning to grip the
family. Their only hope is the next planting season but they will
only be able to enjoy the food in March 2006. They need food now.
The biggest question is who will bridge this gap.
The Zimbabwe
Red Cross Society, through its home-based care programme, delivers
food supplies for five people per household. For Emilda's family
this is only enough for one week as the number of family members
out-numbers the ration.
"I feel my children
will die soon if they don't get enough food now and it will be hard
for me to look after their children on my own," she says, as tears
start dripping down her face. The family can only eat once a day
and Emilda spends the entire day under the sun without eating.
Emilda's family
is among 12 million people in southern Africa whose lives are threatened
by a severe food crisis. The region, with the highest HIV and AIDS
prevalence in the world, was almost brought to its knees in 2002
and 2003, when aid agencies chipped in to save human lives. The
current food insecurity emergency, although not as severe as that
of two years ago, has the potential to create tragedy.
"We need to
act immediately to avoid a tragic deterioration in an already alarming
situation," said Richard Hunlede, head of the Africa Department
at the International Federation, which has launched an appeal seeking
39 million Swiss francs (€ 25.3 million/US$ 29.3 million) to assist
1.5 million people in seven countries in Southern Africa (Lesotho,
Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe) for
nine months.
The recently
launched appeal seeks to give assistance to 1.5 million people facing
hunger, like Emilda and her family, until the harvest of 2006. Apart
from food aid, plans include food-for-work projects, restoring self-reliance
in agriculture, ensuring access to safe water and building the capacity
of national Red Cross staff to deal with livelihood and food security
problems. The operation will target people living with HIV and AIDS,
households with orphans, female-headed households, people with disabilities
and households headed by older people.
But the response
to the appeal so far is not good news for people like Emilda, her
daughters and grandchildren and others in the region.
"The appeal
response started off on a very slow note, the bulk of donations
going towards the Malawi operation. Yet the stories we hear from
other affected countries are harrowing too," says Françoise
Le Goff, the head of the International Federation delegation in
Southern Africa.
In Malawi, one
of the hardest hit countries, many families in the south are desperate
for food.
"People here
are resorting to wild foods which they do not normally eat even,
when things are difficult, but they do not seem to have an option"
says Francis Musasa, the Malawi Red Cross Society information officer.
"Some of these
wild fruits can be poisonous and we were hoping that by this time
of the year food supplies would have improved but the pace is very
slow and urgent aid is required to save human lives," he adds.
Although Emilda
still has to grapple with how to feed thirteen people until the
harvest, recently the Zimbabwe Red Cross Society gave nearly a thousand
households with seeds and fertilizers.
"We strongly
feel one way of improving livelihood recovery following the drought
that destroyed crops is to give people agricultural inputs," says
Abel Augustinio, the Relief Coordinator for Zimbabwe Red Cross.
The seeds and
fertilizer have made Emilda's burden slightly lighter.
"We were glad
because we did not have money to buy the seeds and fertilizer. We
do not know what were going to do, but we still need food now to
take us to the next harvest," said Emilda adding that in good times
she harvests as much as fifty bags of maize which is enough to feed
her family for the whole year.
However as donors
take time to respond, many humanitarian organizations describe a
vicious circle in the region, especially in Malawi. Poverty, hunger
and the need to sustain their families force may young women into
commercial sex, subject to the whims of clients who often refuse
to use condoms for protection.
In Emilda's
case, some of her grandchildren have already dropped out of school
and may be forced to contribute to family survival through whatever
means they can find. In such situations, food aid does not just
prevent starvation, but is a resource that allows families the freedom
to be able to opt out of this vicious cycle. There can be no other
priority more urgent in the region at present than breaking the
link between poverty and the spread of HIV/AIDS.
The solution
that the International Federation is working on, would see food
aid provided at the same time as livelihood support such as seeds
and fertilizer.
"I pray that
the Red Cross continues and increases its rations just for the sake
my daughters and their children."
Visit the IFRC
fact sheet
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