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NGOs
struggle to feed the hungry
PLUS
News
March 05, 2008 http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77132
Njabulo Sibanda,
15, who lives in Highfield, a low-income suburb in southwestern
Harare, capital of Zimbabwe, is one of the more than one million
children in the country orphaned by the AIDS epidemic.
After his parents died
of AIDS-related illnesses over a year ago, he had to drop out of
school to care for his two brothers, the youngest of whom is only
eight. Sibanda does odd jobs, trying to scrape together enough money
for school fees, food and the rent for their backyard shack, but
it's a mammoth task.
The three children
were mostly living off handouts from sympathetic neighbours, or
sometimes going without food, until the headmaster at Sibanda's
brother's school told them about the Child
Protection Society (CPS), a Harare-based non-governmental organisation
(NGO) that runs an urban food programme.
The programme
was started by
Action Aid International (AAI) in 2004, with funding from the
UK's Department for International Development (DFID), and is implemented
by CPS and other NGOs. The Sibanda children now receive rations
of maizemeal, cooking oil, beans, porridge and soap.
"The rations are
modest but our lives have become a lot better," Sibanda told
IRIN/PlusNews. "There is a bit of decency in the way we survive
now, as we no longer have to beg for food from neighbours and strangers
like we used to do. I can manage to put aside for other needs part
of the money I earn by cleaning other people's cars and selling
cigarettes.
The urban food programme
operates in Harare and Chitungwiza, a dormitory suburb south of
the capital; in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second largest city; and Gweru,
capital of Midlands Province. It targets home-based care clients
who are chronically ill, families caring for large numbers of orphans
and vulnerable children, single-parent households and families without
able-bodied adults.
Norah Hunda of CPS said
her organisation was reaching 300 households, mostly those with
orphans, or those in which the head of the family had little or
no source of income.
"The programme is
doing a lot to reduce urban food vulnerability, but it should be
understood that it is merely supplementary," Hunda told IRIN/PlusNews.
"The handouts do not vary with the size of the family or dependants,
and where the household is too big this becomes a challenge to those
meant to benefit, as they have to find other means of augmenting
their rations."
If families have a garden
or space to make one, they are taught low-input gardening and provided
with seeds and gardening tools; when they do not have land of their
own, the city council provides them with some or they are given
mobile bags in which to grow vegetables.
Grace Kachitu, 75, of
Harare, who lives on her own, has been able to grow tomatoes and
beans with the help of the programme. "Due to my advanced age,
I have ailments that need good food. I don't have a source of income
and with this garden I can adequately feed myself. I even sell some
of my produce to buy other things."
A 2007 assessment of
the urban food programme found that it benefited 3,145 people in
its first two years, but the squeeze on resources resulting from
Zimbabwe's economic crisis restricted the number to 2,000 in 2007.
Zimbabwe has
been in the throes of an economic meltdown for the past eight years,
with hyperinflation
of 100,000 percent and still rising, unemployment at an estimated
80 percent, around 80 percent of the population living on less than
US$1 dollar per day, and consumers surviving without basic commodities
such as water and fuel.
Harare's city council
last year said more than a third of the capital's population, officially
estimated at around 1.3 million, were living on one meal a day and
cases of malnutrition were on the rise. Consecutive years of drought
and chronic shortages of agricultural inputs have left millions
of people needing food aid.
In an attempt to cushion
its beneficiaries from inflation, the urban food programme arranged
a food voucher system with a number of supermarket chains to provide
households with monthly food packs worth US$18.
The system was disrupted
in June 2007 by an acute shortage of basic commodities after the
government forced businesses to reduce their prices, which led to
manufacturers stopping production because they found the price controls
unsustainable.
"Because
of the shortages in shops, we are now resorting to placing money
into the accounts of beneficiaries, who are being urged to speedily
withdraw it and buy their items wherever they can find them, even
if it means going to the informal market, where they tend to be
more readily available albeit more expensive," said George
Jijita, a programme assistant at Padare,
a local NGO implementing the urban food programme in Harare and
Chitungwiza.
Giving beneficiaries
money has its own set of problems, because by the time the payments
reflect in the recipients' bank accounts and they are able to withdraw
them, the prices of commodities have usually risen even more.
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