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Daughters
fetch high prices as brides
IRIN News
July 17, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73272
HARARE, 17 July 2007
(IRIN) - Daughters have become a high-priced commodity in Zimbabwe,
where a dowry has become a means of escaping poverty in a rapidly
declining economy. "When people are mired in such hunger as
we have been seeing in this country for over seven years, they will
do anything to survive," Innocent Makwiramiti, a Harare-based
economist, told IRIN.
Parents have taken to
demanding "absurd" amounts of money and other commodities
from their in-laws. "It is not surprising that many parents
are looking to the bride-price as one way to make ends meet,"
he said.
The dowry, a cultural
practice, "has ceased to be a social problem and now needs
to be seen from an economic point of view, with girl children being
used to generate income," Makwiramiti said. "Unless the
economic meltdown is addressed, we will continue to see parents
commodifying their daughters."
Most Zimbabweans are
struggling to survive: unemployment is out of control, inflation
has topped 4,000 percent, and 80 percent of the population is living
below the poverty datum line.
Daughters
as a pension fund
Moses Jaison, 54, from
the populous suburb of Mabvuku in southeastern Harare, the capital,
last year betrothed his daughter Miriam, 15, still a minor in Zimbabwean
law, to a polygamous businessman thirty years older than she was.
"The pain of seeing
my family go without food and other basic necessities drove me into
such a decision," Jaison told IRIN. "At that age, Miriam
should have been in school and, being as intelligent as she is,
might have ended up as a doctor or pilot, but poverty has rendered
that only a pipedream."
Miriam stopped going
to school at the age of eleven, after her father was laid off when
the company that had employed him for thirty years closed down.
Miriam's husband paid Jaison Z$15 million [US$115] and settled the
mortgage on the family home, which had almost been repossessed when
they fell behind with the monthly instalments.
Jaison barely scrapes
a living by selling sculptures along the road linking Harare with
Mutare, a city about 280km southeast of the capital, but because
tourism has plummeted as a result of Zimbabwe's poor image, sales
are slow and he does not earn nearly enough to take care of his
wife and five children.
However, Miriam found
living with three other wives too demanding and recently sought
refuge at a local non-governmental organisation that promotes the
welfare of girl children.
"That has worsened
my plight, because the businessman who had married her has told
me that I should give him back what he paid me as a [dowry],"
said Jaison. "That money has run out, and the police have indicated
that they want to arrest me for ill-treating my daughter by marrying
her off before she attained the legal age for marriage, and her
husband could also be taken in for making a minor his wife."
Rich men, who have often
generated their wealth illegally by trading in foreign currency
or fuel on the informal market, do not have a problem in meeting
the demands of in-laws, but those who do not earn much find the
wooing tough.
Grooms
or cash cows
John Matiza, 29, who
works in South Africa as a restaurant waiter, had no choice but
to break up with his girlfriend of five years because her parents
said they wanted to be paid in foreign currency, a condition he
could not afford. "My heart bleeds to realise that I cannot
marry the woman of my dreams simply because her parents think I
am a cash cow," Matiza told IRIN.
"I earn
just over 1,000 South African rand [US$143] a month, and can hardly
save money because accommodation and transport are expensive in
Johannesburg, yet my would-be in-laws wanted me to pay them R12,000
[US$1,725]." His lover's parents also demanded 15 head of cattle,
or an additional R15,000, part of which could be paid as monthly
groceries sourced in South Africa.
Basic commodities are
in short supply in Zimbabwe, and many people have to rely on items
being brought in from neighbouring South Africa or Botswana.
More than three million
Zimbabweans are estimated to have left the country in search of
employment in other countries since the economy started deteriorating
in 2000. The majority do menial jobs and work under harsh conditions,
but are consoled by the fact that they can remit money to their
families and relatives.
"My lover's parents
come from a poor background and they should have been able to appreciate
that money is not easy to raise; maybe they thought that I made
much money, since I work in South Africa," said Matiza.
The parents also argued
that because they had educated their daughter up to college level,
and she would have looked after them, they needed to recoup the
costs by asking for a high bride price.
Matiza went to pay the
dowry, and begged for the demands to be reduced until he and his
relatives were eventually forcefully removed from the house. His
prospective in-laws insisted that their daughter would wait for
a man who could make them live in comfort, and told him they would
not accept a marriage "full of love but no money for our daughter
and us".
"Over the years
I have seen so many couples - over whose marriages I presided -
break down because material considerations are now taking precedence
over love. People are marrying for money and, no sooner have they
started staying together, do more problems emerge," Tim Foroma,
a pastor with a Pentecostal church, told IRIN.
He said he was outraged
by some of the demands the in-laws made, such as asking to be bought
houses, cellphones or even cars. "Some of them are even ordering
their sons-in-law to put them on medical aid schemes or funeral
policies, just in case they fall sick and don't have the money to
cover the expense, or in the event that they die."
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