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Hungry
in Zimbabwe: 'If you rest, you starve'
Associated
Press
November
19, 2008
View
article on the Associated Press website
Katy
Phiri, who is in her 70s, picks up single corn kernels spilled from
trucks that ferry the harvest to market. She says she hasn't
eaten for three days. Rebecca Chipika, a child of 9, prods a stick
into a termite mound to draw out insects. She sweeps them into a
bag for her family's evening meal. These scenes from a food
catastrophe are unfolding in Doma, a district of rural Zimbabwe
where journalists rarely venture. It's a stronghold of President
Robert Mugabe's party and his enforcers and informants are
everywhere. At a school for villagers visited by The Associated
Press, enrollment is down to four pupils from 20. The teachers still
willing to work in this once thriving farming and mining district
160 miles northeast of Harare, the capital, say parents pay them
in corn, cooking oil, goats or chickens. One trip by bus to the
nearest bank to draw their government salaries costs more than teachers
earn in a month.
Meanwhile, the
country is in political paralysis following disputed elections in
March. A power-sharing deal
signed two months ago has stalled over the allocation of ministries
between President Robert Mugabe's party and opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change. Shingirayi
Chiyamite is a trader from Harare who brings household goods to
the countryside to barter for crops. He says a 12-inch bar of laundry
soap exchanges for 22 pounds of corn. He crisscrosses the land in
search of the few villages that have corn to spare hauls his purchases
to the highway and hitchhikes back to the city. Some of the corn
will feed his family, the rest he sells. He is constantly on the
move. "If you rest, you starve," he says. Information
is almost as scarce as food. Survival is the obsession. Cell phones
operate only sporadically. State radio has not been received since
the district relay beacon broke down eight months ago.
Mhangura, a
town of about 3,000 people, has had no running water for months.
Power outages happen daily because of a lack of cash to maintain
utilities. People walk about three miles to a dam to fill pails
or gasoline cans. Some of the scarce water is used to embalm the
dead in wet sand, a centuries-old African tradition to preserve
a body until family members gather for the burial. "There's
nothing here. People are dying of illness and hunger. Burial parties
are going out every day," said Michael Zava, a trader in Mhangura.
The hospital that serves the district is closed, and so is its small
morgue, so there's no way of telling how many are dying, Zava
said. Children's hair is discoloring, a sign of malnutrition.
Adults are wizened and dressed in rags - they have no cash for new
clothes. Zava said he has seen villagers plucking undigested corn
kernels from cow dung to wash and eat. A slaughtered goat is eaten
down to everything but hooves, bones and teeth. Crickets, cicadas
and beetles also can make a meal.
The food crisis began after 2000, when Mugabe launched an often
violent campaign to seize white-owned farms and give them to veterans
of his guerrilla war against white rule over the former British
colony. Officials from Mugabe's party toured the Doma district
recently and told the new farm owners that the government could
not supply their needs. They were advised to make do with what seed
they had left, and with animal manure for fertilizer. Ordinarily,
after harvest the cotton fields are burned to protect the next year's
crop from disease. Not this year. People couldn't afford to
buy new seeds, and were hoping to get another season out of last
year's crop. Instead, the crops came up diseased. Pasture
has been burned by poachers to scare rabbits and rodents into traps.
Deer are being hunted for food, and lions from remote parts of the
Doma region and Chenanga nature reserve are killing cattle, donkeys
and goats, villagers said. Jackals, baboons and goats compete with
villagers for roots and wild fruits. The wild guava season is over
and matamba, a hard orange-like fruit, cannot safely be eaten until
ripe. Villagers pick the fruit and cover it with donkey or cow dung,
leaving it in the sun to hasten ripening. Katy Phiri, the grandmother
collecting corn kernels, said she put her trust in God. "There's
nothing else I can do," she said. "I have never gone this
hungry before."
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