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Zimbabwean
villagers on the brink of starvation
Fanuel Jongwe,
Mail & Guardian (SA)
March 12, 2006
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=266462&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
NYANGA - Chipo
Mapako, a village head in the eastern Zimbabwean district of Nyanga
does not remember when he last had a square meal.
The 56-year-old
father of seven squints up at the sky then holds his chin and shakes
his head when asked when he last had a proper repast.
"The daily struggle
for us is to find enough food to stave off hunger," says Mapako,
who heads a village of at least 300 people in the district renowned
as much for its picturesque mountain ranges as for its dry, stony
fields.
"Getting sufficient
food is hard enough and who would think about nutrients?"
Nine-year-old
Takudzwa Tazvitya, a fourth grade pupil, eats a handful of roasted
peanuts and a cup of milkless tea for breakfast before starting
off barefoot on a seven-kilometre (four-mile) trek to school.
After class
the boy, who wants to become a policeman, joins a queue in a makeshift
soup-kitchen at Tamunesa Primary School where hungry pupils carrying
battered bowls and greasy plastic plates, receive fortified porridge.
The gruel contains
"all the nutrients they miss in the meals at home," according to
an official from the UN World Food Programme (WFP).
Mapako and Takudzwa
are among thousands of villagers in the Nyanga district near Zimbabwe's
border with Mozambique, living on the verge of starvation and relying
on monthly food rations from WFP.
"We usually
have two small meals - one during the day and one before we go to
bed but the situation is so bad we go to bed on a meal of boiled
vegetables," says Venenzia Mwendazviya, a 26-year-old mother of
three.
"We crush peanuts
to squeeze out cooking oil but we often run out of the peanuts and
just eat boiled vegetables."
Goodson Murinye,
head of the WFP office in the eastern city of Mutare, says the district
is in the red category -- the most vulnerable -- according to a
study done late last year by a committee of state welfare officers
and aid agencies.
"At least 42
percent of the population is food insecure with the highest malnutrition
rate in the province," Murinye told AFP at a food distribution centre
where villagers lined up to receive their monthly handouts of 10
kilograms of corn-meal.
The district
also ranked third in the country in HIV/AIDS prevalence, according
to WFP.
The UN food
agency and partners such as the Irish food aid agencies Concern
and GOAL, are feeding 1,700 people with the number of beneficiaries
expected to swell to 74,956 by month-end, Murinye said.
School head
Clifford Kanengoni said the food handouts helped reduce absenteeism
among pupils at his school.
"The pupils
are more alert and look healthier," he said. "Teaching them is more
fun."
Zimbabwe is
reeling under severe food shortages with at least 4.3 million in
need of food aid until the next harvests in May.
Michael Huggins,
WFP spokesman for Southern Africa, told AFP the UN agency was feeding
4.3 million people in Zimbabwe and that the situation was so "critical"
that thousands would continue to require food aid for the coming
year.
Beneficiaries
of WFP's food aid include three million on food distribution programs,
people with HIV-AIDS, schoolchildren, and pregnant and lactating
mothers, Huggins said.
The government
blames the food deficit on a drought which ravaged the bulk of southern
Africa two years ago.
But Huggins
said the shortages were a result of a battery of factors including
the failure by the economy to attract investment in infrastructure,
chronic poverty and the country's controversial reforms.
Zimbabwe's land
reforms, which began often violently in 2000 after the rejection
in a referendum on a government-sponsored draft constitution, have
seen some 4,000 white farmers lose their properties.
Critics say
the majority of the beneficiaries of the land reforms lack farming
skills and rely on government handouts.
They also blame
the land reforms for the chronic food shortages in what was once
southern Africa's bread basket.
"And you can't
discount the fact that the 20 percent of the population is HIV positive,"
Huggins said "That means that nearly 20 percent of the population
is not able to work."
Huggins said
although President Robert Mugabe declared last year that his country
would not need food aid from foreign donors "we were still feeding
more than a million of people for most of last year."
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