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Hunger road trip of rural Zimbabwe
Matthew
Cochrane, BBC News
September 09, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7603764.stm
Aid worker Matthew Cochrane
tells the BBC News website about the Zimbabweans he met while visiting
the country's south-east Masvingo province.
He works for the International
Federation of Red Cross, which was not included in the recent government
food aid ban - lifted last month - because of the agency's unique
operating status under international law.
Read Matthew's account
of his road trip and the people he met:
Sunday
31 August 2008
My first impression driving
through Masvingo province is how dry and bare it is.
The countryside is brown.
Riverbeds are full of
rocks and sand.
Supermarket shelves are
also bare, apart from a couple of boxes of tea.
Masvingo is about three-hours'
drive from the capital, Harare. My colleagues at the local Red Cross
branch in Masvingo town visit people living with HIV/Aids in their
homes. They also look after children who are considered to be vulnerable
as well as those who have been orphaned by the disease.
Tendai
Living close to the clinic
is an HIV-positive mother, Tendai.
She welcomes us into
her very small room that she shares with her daughter-in-law and
her five-month-old granddaughter.
Tendai has been living
with HIV for the past three years.
She has been receiving
anti-retroviral (ARV) treatment but now without food it is having
an extraordinarily effect on her life.
She explains she often
has to go for three or four days without anything to eat. And because
the body needs food to absorb the drugs, she now regularly has to
be hospitalised because her body cannot cope.
If she has nothing to
eat, she suffers from chronic nausea, headaches and diarrhoea.
The last time she was
admitted to hospital, her brother came and offered to look after
her son for her as he was in a better position to look after him.
Tendai misses her son
but knows he is being looked after well.
She is visited everyday
through by Red Cross volunteers, who bring food when they can, although
it is not always possible and even they have to go without.
Tendai tells me how she
longs for the day when she can provide for her own child again.
Monday
1 September 2008
First thing Monday morning,
we visit a child-headed household - a 16-year-old girl and her two
brothers, aged 14 and 12.
Their youngest brother,
who is now 10, was adopted by a family living in Harare after their
parents died in 2002 from an Aids-related illness.
In the past, before the
food crisis got so bad, they received food from organisations like
the Red Cross but now because of a lack of funding they do not.
They tell me that they
ate yesterday as the local pastor came to see them and gave them
some beans.
As far as my colleagues
know, none of the children are HIV-positive.
Otellia
We say our good-byes
and then travel to Chivi, which is about an hour's drive from Masvingo
town, to meet a woman called Otellia.
She has three children.
Last year her husband
died.
Soon after he passed
away, she started feeling unwell herself and after going to the
local clinic she found she was also HIV-positive.
We come across her walking
along the road from her home. She tells us she was on her way to
one of her neighbours in search of a pinch of sugar so she can make
herself a cup of tea - all she would have had that day.
Like Tendai, when she
has nothing to eat the ARVs affect her badly.
Sitting - exhausted and
weak - against the wall in her small home, Otellia tells us how
she is unable to even walk if she takes her tablets on an empty
stomach.
Despite her situation,
she is proudly dignified and speaks overwhelmingly about her appreciation
for the support she does get.
She has a vegetable patch
but because she has been so ill lately she has not been able to
plant any seeds and tend to them.
But as she says, even
if she is strong enough to, there is no water anymore.
Her family's nearest
source of water is nearly three miles (4.5km) away - a trip her
children or kind neighbours make for her these days.
A lack of rain and access
to agricultural inputs has left many thousands of people in this
area without the means to grow their own food, as they used to do;
and on top of that, even those with money are unable to buy much
in the local stores because their shelves are mostly empty these
days.
Siziwe
After leaving Otellia
we travel further up the road to visit a lady called Siziwe, a single
parent with three children.
She also cares for another
nine Aids orphans from three different families. The children are
aged between five and 12.
The impact of the food
situation is well illustrated by her extended family.
Siziwe tells me that
they often go hungry for four days at a time.
She used to be able to
afford to send seven of the children to school but now because of
the rampant hyperinflation and the high and ever-increasing cost
of life in Zimbabwe she can only pay for three.
But as she explains,
sometimes they can't even make the journey to school because they're
so weak from hunger.
I am taken aback by Siziwe's
extraordinary strength and humility.
On the way back to Masvingo
we come across some children in the trees along the side of the
road - it is hard to tell if they are picking the fruit to supplement
their diets or whether they are just playing.
Tuesday
2 September 2008
On Tuesday I visit one
of the Red Cross's supplementary feeding centres in Mwenezi, where
more than 200 children are given a daily meal, Monday to Friday.
The children,
all aged five years old and under, come from households that have
been identified as vulnerable homes - most are looked after by an
older sibling or by parents who are very ill with HIV/AIDS.
The children wait patiently,
talking and laughing amongst themselves, for their lunch of sadza
[porridge made from maize meal] and beans.
After the children have
eaten we sit on the floor and play and chat.
Lucky
The provisional manager,
Lucky, calls round to the feeding centre.
I ask him for his view
on the impact of the feeding programme and he says that the local
health authorities are really optimistic about the children who
are able to benefit from it.
As lunch is wrapping
up, a few children from the local school appear - they enter the
area quietly and sit to one side away from the little ones, waiting
to be called over.
Apparently they ask their
teacher if they can leave their class to come and wait for the leftovers
and she allows them to. Although they're older than five and not
considered to be so needy, they are allowed to come and have some
food after the little ones have eaten.
In this part of Zimbabwe,
almost 2,000 people are living with HIV and about 650 vulnerable
children are looked after by the Red Cross.
Musa
Musa - one of my colleagues
working in the field - describes the current food crisis, as "severe".
And most worrying for
her is the fact that because so many of her HIV-positive patients
are unable to eat a proper diet, they are now beginning to stop
taking their ARVs.
She tells me how they
blame the pills for how they are feeling; not the lack of food.
She goes on to say that
in the past six months, at least 30 of her patients have died.
One thing that will stay
with me from this trip is how proud and dignified people were.
Not once did anyone ask
for help.
But their main topic
of conversation was food and climate change as the seasons that
enabled them to always live in this land are not the same anymore.
I found the severity
of it and the way it is affecting so many, who are already so vulnerable,
extremely dispiriting.
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