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The
IoS Christmas appeal: Mugabe's disgrace: Starvation threatens millions
in Zim
The
Independent (UK)
November 30, 2008
View article on the Independent (UK) website
The future for children
in Zimbabwe is bleak, and getting bleaker every day. A country which
once fed itself, and exported food to its neighbours, is on the
verge of mass starvation. A cholera epidemic is raging out of control,
and health professionals expect an equally deadly outbreak of malaria
to follow soon.
The UN World Food Programme
(WFP) estimates that 5.1 million Zimbabweans will need food aid
by the end of the year. That is more than half the people remaining
in the country, with another three million having fled abroad, mainly
to South Africa. But the WFP is being forced to cut the ration,
because it is short of funds, leaving the most deprived to dig for
roots or strip the trees to survive. More than once, labourers have
fainted from hunger while unloading consignments of WFP food. A
weakened population has no ability to resist the diseases, including
anthrax, now springing up.
Though these disasters
have been worsened by the disintegration of a health system that
was once among the best in Africa, Zimbabwe's economic collapse
underlies everything. The official annual inflation rate is 243
million per cent, but independent economists calculate that it is
actually 2.8 quintillion - a quintillion is one followed by
18 zeroes.
Doctors and
teachers whose monthly wage does not buy one square meal are leaving
their jobs to forage for food like everyone else. Poverty drives
people to the cities in most Third World countries, but in Zimbabwe
there is migration to the countryside, where there is a chance of
growing something to eat. As the year ends, the surge of hope following
the September power-sharing agreement
between President Robert Mugabe and the opposition has turned to
despair, as the deal has failed to have any impact on people's lives.
This weekend, there were reports that the constitution
will be amended to implement the agreement, but progress has been
fitful and fundamental disagreements remain.
The first sight that
greets visitors who fly into Harare is that of people tilling public
land beside the airport. Even where doctors and teachers are still
working, they are defeated by the lack of basic materials such as
dressings, surgical gloves, books and writing materials. Harare's
hospitals have stopped functioning, and schools around the country
are shutting down.
Last week Catherine Bragg,
a senior UN aid official, said school attendance had plunged from
above 90 per cent to below 20 per cent. A total of 1.6 million,
roughly one in four children, have lost one or both parents, the
highest proportion in the world. That is almost entirely due to
HIV/Aids, but now it is the young who are dying. "We are not
too far away from seeing children being carried off by hunger,"
said Rachel Pounds, country director of Save the Children (UK).
Chronic malnutrition under the age of five stunts children physically
and mentally for life.
But Zimbabwe's people
are amazingly resilient, she adds, and a little aid goes a long
way. In the parts of the Zambezi River valley where the organisation
works, villagers who have been living on roots and leaves share
handouts of maize meal with their neighbours. When seeds are distributed,
they will see that family members who did not qualify receive some.
Save the Children is
feeding 140,000 people in the area, but another 45,000 are losing
out, because the WFP does not have enough food supplies. The communities
decide who qualifies for help, but the distinction between the desperation
of those in category A, who will receive food first, and those in
category D, who will rarely if ever get supplies, can seem microscopic.
Take 13-year-old Thandi
Munkuli, who was digging up makuli roots in Matabeleland North province
with her mother, Mary. Her family is certainly category A: her father
has been in hospital for two years, probably suffering from Aids,
they have no livestock, and can no longer grow their own food. "We
used to beg for seed from friends and relatives, but they do not
have enough for themselves," she said. A simple way to gauge
deprivation in Zimbabwe is to ask when someone last had sadza,the
staple food made from maize meal. The poorest cannot afford enough
meal to make the stiff mash that is considered essential to life.
Instead they have to make a watery porridge that gives very little
nutrition.
For Thandi and the two
other children in the family, the answer was three days previously.
"We have been living on makuli since then," she said.
The potato-sized roots are white, crunchy and utterly tasteless,
yet small children have been seen to grab and eat them as soon as
they are dug up, without even cleaning the dirt away. Though the
roots have no nutritional value, they fill empty stomachs. But they
can be dangerous: some carry toxic parasites, and can be so poisonous
they need to be boiled for hours to make them edible. Many other
wild fruits give people stomach cramps and diarrhoea, yet are still
eaten. This contributes to the spread of cholera, as does the movement
of people in search of food.
No rations have yet been
distributed in Thandi's area, but if and when they arrive, she and
her family will be entitled to them. But Mercy Shumba will not,
even though she has not had sadza for a month. Sometimes all she
eats is a stew of mulberry leaves, boiled up by her great-grandmother,
Zandile Nkomo, who has never known such hard times in all her 74
years.
Mercy, who thinks she
is seven - she has no birth certificate - lives in a
dilapidated mud and thatch house, 20 minutes' walk from the nearest
track. The mulberry leaves came from a tree planted by an absent
neighbour, next to a mango tree which had been stripped of its fruit
by Mercy and her six-year-old cousin, Nesta, too desperate to wait
for it to ripen. "I feel sad and weak all the time," said
Mercy. She is the oldest of Mrs Nkomo's five great-grandchildren,
four of whom sat with her on a mat. The youngest, seven-month-old
Sibongile, looked unnaturally quiet in her great-grandmother's arms,
and her sister, three-year-old Patricia, had the greying, turning
to ginger, hair that is a clear sign of severe malnutrition. They
were so listless that no one cracked so much as a smile when their
only chair toppled over and I sprawled in the dirt.
Mercy used to go to school,
a walk of several hours. "I liked the Ndebele language lessons,
but I was finding it difficult to learn, because I was so hungry,"
she said. Her education would have come to a halt anyway -
her school has been closed since August.
"What we try to
do," said Ms Pounds of Save the Children, "is to improve
children's chances of survival, and then to get them some kind of
education." If anyone sounds deserving of this, it is Mercy,
but her family is in category D, for two reasons. One is that there
are two able-bodied adults in the household. Mrs Nkomo's two grand-daughters,
the children's mothers, go off in search of food each day, taking
Mercy's disabled three-year-old sister with them. Since each of
their five girls has a different father, it is not hard to guess
how they earn the maize meal and cooking oil they bring back.
The second reason the
family is seen as less wretched than some is that Mrs Nkomo still
has two cows. "If I sell them to buy seed, or slaughter them,
we would not be able to plough our plot," she said. "We
don't have any seed now, but perhaps we might get some." Barter
has almost entirely replaced cash in Zimbabwe's rural areas, but
this does not make country dwellers immune from the effects of economic
collapse. One goat used to be worth 50kg of maize meal, but now
fetches only 10kg - another reason why owners don't want to
sell. But anthrax has flared up in Matabeleland North, threatening
to leave people like Mrs Nkomo with nothing. Even worse, hungry
people have eaten the infected meat, spreading the disease to humans,
at least three of whom have died. Once again, given the collapse
of administrative systems, the outbreak may be hard to contain.
"I am just waiting
for God to do whatever he can, because I have lost all hope,"
Mrs Nkomo said.
Save the Children is
seeking to set up emergency feeding centres for children under five.
Even the severely malnourished can be brought back from the brink
with Plumpynut, an enriched mixture of peanut butter, powdered milk
and sugar.
The work of agencies
such as Save the Children was suspended for months during the violent
election campaign. When Ms Pounds and her staff resumed operations,
conditions were infinitely worse than before. Zimbabweans do not
deserve the fate that has befallen them. If they are to be given
any hope this Christmas, it will have to come from us.
* Some names
have been changed
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