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Flight
of the young ones
Basildon Peta, The Independent (UK)
December 11, 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article3241938.ece
Laina Moyo's dream was
to become a doctor. It was not a wild ambition. She was the star
pupil in maths and science at her school - until, that is,
she was forced to leave because her mother could no longer afford
the tuition fee increases in Zimbabwe's hyperinflationary environment.
But it was when her mother began to be unable to afford not just
fees, but also food, that 13-year-old Laina took the boldest decision
of her life. Without consulting anyone she left home and decided
to join the "great trek" of Zimbabwean children streaming
across the border into South Africa in search of a better life.
It was a 350-mile walk. Laina is just one of the thousands of children
- no one seems sure of the exact figure - who have undertaken
the lonely and hazardous journey to join the quarter of Zimbabwe's
16 million people who are estimated to have fled to South Africa
to escape the economic and political turmoil in their own country.
Like tens of thousands of children of her age, Laina's life aspirations
have been ruined.
Even as a hero's welcome
was being prepared in Zimbabwe yesterday for President Robert Mugabe,
as he returned from what the local press portrayed as a propaganda
triumph at the EU-Africa summit in Portugal over the weekend, the
exodus of ordinary Zimbabweans continued apace. Officials at the
local police station confirm an upsurge in the numbers of children
arrested while illegally crossing the border. The horrors of the
unaccompanied journey undertaken by children, some of them as young
as eight, is itself a testament to how awful life has become inside
Zimbabwe, from which many foreign news reporters are banned. The
average life expectancy for women in Zimbabwe is now just 34 years.
The cause of this is an agriculture-based economy that has been
in free fall since the violent seizures of thousands of white-owned
commercial farms from 2000 onwards. The nation which was once southern
Africa's bread basket is now experiencing acute shortages of food,
most basic goods, hard currency, petrol and medicines. Economic
mismanagement has brought it the world's highest inflation rate.
It was to escape this
turmoil that Laina left home. "We went for several days without
meals," she said. "We could not even scavenge for food
in dustbins because none in the neighbourhood had any leftovers
to dump." She knew things could only get worse. Though Zimbabwe's
state-run Central Statistical Office (CSO) has declared that inflation
was officially "pegged" at 14,800 per cent in October,
many economists now say it is running at 100,000 per cent. In practice
that means it has become incalculable due to the rapidity of daily
price increases. The situation could only get worse for impoverished
families such as Laina's. She decided enough was enough and set
out for South Africa with the intention of finding a job and sending
back money to her mother and three younger siblings. When the cash
began to arrive, she hoped, they would forgive her for abandoning
home so abruptly.
It was a perilous journey.
She had to contend with the hippo and crocodile-infested Limpompo
river to reach the border. She was also prey to organised criminals,
who pretend to assist illegal cross-border jumping, but more often
rob or rape those they purport to help. They sometimes even murder
their clients. Laina was lucky. But when she arrived at the main
Beitbridge/ Musina border crossing into South Africa she encountered
others with even more desperate stories. When I met her she had
teamed up with Talent Makuyane, who had travelled more than 1,300
miles from eastern Zimbabwe. The two were thrown together once they
became stuck, without any official papers, in Musina town on the
South African side of the border. Their stories echoed one another
uncannily. Talent, also 13, had been forced to drop out of secondary
school because her parents could no longer afford her fees. At her
home there was no food either. She could not remember when she last
ate a slice of bread.
She reached the border
by boarding buses and trains even though she had no money for the
fare. By the time she was discovered and thrown off, she would at
least have covered some distance. When she was unable to board some
form of public transport, she would simply walk. "All I wanted
was to cross the border, get any job and earn money to at least
have a taste of bread and milk," she said. But the life they
were seeking proved elusive. Many of those who have fled, Laina
and Talent included, have fallen victim to sexual predators and
abusive employers. "The abuses we are now living with here
[in South Africa] are far worse than the hunger we faced at home,"
said Laina. Their story is borne out by local people. "Instead
of pitying and helping these children, the people here see them
as objects for all manner of abuse," said Khotso Motswaane,
a 45 year old Musina resident. One of his neighbours, he confided,
gave refuge to three Zimbabwean girls, all below 15, because they
had nowhere to stay. They are now sex slaves. He said the things
that happened to children in the town were "despicable".
Save the Children -
one of the three charities being supported in this year's Independent
Christmas Appeal - is one of the few organisations working
to help the children. Lilian Rambuda, one of the charity's outreach
officers in Musina, confirmed that the story told by Mr Motswaane
was by no means exaggerated. "It is not uncommon for a man
here to have three Zimbabwean girl children under his custody, abusing
them sexually," she said. The complications are far-reaching.
Some the girls have contracted Aids and died. One girl Ms Rambuda
is attempting to help is pregnant by a man old enough to be her
great-grandfather. When he found out he abandoned her. The girl
is now too traumatised to talk to strangers and she now spends her
time locked up in his shack.
"Old men here are
literally preying on these girls," said Miss Rambuda. While
the randomness of illegal cross border migration makes it difficult
to compile statistics, she says there is no doubt that very large
numbers of girls and boys are streaming across the border into South
Africa at regular intervals. "You see them sleeping under bridges,
picking food from dump sites, then you easily know they are from
Zimbabwe," she said. At the border post, one police officer
confirmed that sexual intercourse with a girl under 16 is statutory
rape under South African law. But the children won't report cases
of abuse because they fear being arrested when they contact the
police. "It is not easy to deal with this problem. My opinion
is that the government of Zimbabwe must end the suffering of its
people by addressing the problems making them flee their homeland
in the first place," said the officer.
But the most common form
of abuse is not sexual. Zimbabwean children are being used as slave
labour. They are offered menial jobs but their employers do not
then pay them. When the children complain the employers threaten
to report them to the police as illegal immigrants. Laina and Talent
have both encountered this. Each has worked as a housemaid doing
everything from washing, ironing, cooking and gardening to looking
after the children of their "employers". But when they
asked for the R400 a month (£28) they were promised the money
did not materialise. "When I asked for my pay after two months
without receiving a single penny, I was chased away," said
Talent. There is a clear pattern of this, with employers sending
away the children unpaid and recruiting new arrivals from Zimbabwe
ito replace them.
If it were not for Save
the Children, which has assisted her with food and clothes, Laina
says she would have died a long time ago. Many other Zimbabwean
children she has met since arriving in Musina are in the same situation.
And like her they have got in this small dusty town because they
cannot afford the fares to travel further to cities such as Johannesburg
and Cape Town. Many of the girls resort to prostitution for survival.
Save the Children is in the process of setting up care centres where
the Zimbabwean children can be given clothes, fed and taught the
necessary life skills of their choice to be able to get better jobs.
These safe houses will be for all vulnerable children, but cause
resentment among the locals, who see them as only helping foreigners.
From there the children will be referred to relevant government
and other services including health care and psycho-social support.
Outreach workers, using the centres as bases, will tour the dusty
town in search of vulnerable children. The sadness is that, as the
great exodus from Zimbabwe continues, they will not have to look
very hard before they stumble upon young children who desperately
need their help.
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