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Zimbabwe
starves as despair grows
Peter
Biles, BBC News
October
23, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7685819.stm
This year's harvest in
Zimbabwe has been the worst in the country's modern history.
In Mashonaland West province,
some people are trying to survive by eating wild fruit and digging
for roots.
"It's very, very
bad. I've got 12 children and it's hard to find anything to give
them," says a local village chief.
"The whole of my
village is struggling. No one has food.
"There's nothing
left here. So there's nothing I can do."
Driving deep into Mashonaland
West is a reminder that most Zimbabweans live in rural areas.
The area around Karoi
- 200km (124 miles) north of the capital, Harare - provides an illustration
of the suffering currently being experienced in the countryside.
Farmers are without seeds,
fertiliser and fuel. Next year's harvest is already being written
off as a disaster as well.
As the political paralysis
over the formation of the new power-sharing government continues,
people are experiencing severe food shortages brought on by the
catastrophic mismanagement of the economy and the virtual destruction
of the country's commercial agricultural sector.
School
dropouts
Some Zimbabweans get
by on one meal a day if they are lucky, but there is a growing sense
of desperation.
One consequence is that
thousands of children are said to be dropping out of school to look
for food.
"In one district,
10,000 children of a population of 120,000 left school in a period
of six months," says Rachel Pounds, country director of UK
charity Save the Children.
"There's a lot of
lost hope. Zimbabweans put up with things that get worse and worse,
but you can see the despair in some of the poorer families in the
villages.
"It's causing a
breakdown of the community when people have to leave in order to
find food," she added.
One villager in Mashonaland
West pleaded for help before it was "too late".
"If we don't get
help now, most of us are going to die. Nearly everyone here is starving."
showed me three tins
of stored maize, but said that with seven children to feed, the
supply would only last for a week.
Earlier this month, the
UN World Food Programme appealed for $140m (£86m) to provide
vital relief rations over the next six months.
The UN warned that more
than five million people (45% of the population) could need assistance
by early 2009.
In the meantime however,
non-governmental organisations working in Zimbabwe have been hit
hard by the economic collapse of this once prosperous country, and
the resulting cash crisis stemming from levels of inflation that
are now completely out of control.
But it is not just the
rural population which is suffering.
Bizarre
and depressing
In the towns
and cities, food is also in increasingly short supply. A walk around
a suburban supermarket in Harare is a bizarre and depressing experience.
One store I visited looked as though it was in the final stages
of a clearance sale. Only two of the 19 check-out tills were operating,
and most shelves were entirely empty.
There was no milk, cheese,
margarine or yoghurt.
Some cabbages, onions
and limp bunches of spinach were available, along with a few odd
packs of frozen meat.
The aisles intended
for household goods such as soap and toilet paper were empty and
closed off. The only fresh-looking food items in the shop were a
few loaves of bread, priced this week at Z$30,000 a loaf (about
$1).
However, Zimbabweans
are only permitted to withdraw Z$50,000 a day from the banks.
Most people
often cannot afford what little food is available. Only those fortunate
enough to have access to foreign currency can circumnavigate the
shortages.
"We are
distinctly aware that this is a food crisis that is growing,"
says Karen Freeman, the director of USAID in Zimbabwe.
"The issue of urban
vulnerability has never really been felt here before.
"You could go to
the store and buy food in the past, but now you have no option.
"There's no food
in the store and there's no food on the ground. The crisis now is
one where you can neither buy food nor grow food."
This is almost entirely
a man-made crisis, created by President Robert Mugabe's government,
and his administration stands accused of having done nothing to
help.
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