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A
decade of living in the aftermath of flooding
IRIN News
September 23, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90561
It was 10 years ago that
a cyclone hit remote rural communities in eastern Zimbabwe destroying
much of the basic infrastructure, but in the absence of any reconstruction
it may as well have been yesterday.
In a village in rural
Chipinge District on the Mozambican border in Manicaland Province,
schoolchildren have become accustomed to being educated in roofless
classrooms.
"The majority of
the children learn in these run-down classrooms and the situation
has been like this since 2000 when heavy rains destroyed the school,"
primary school teacher, Trymore Sithole, 46, told IRIN.
"We have tried our
best to source for money to build new school blocks, toilets and
teachers' houses as well as replace the furniture but no one is
ready to help us," Sithole, a teacher at the school for the
past 14 years, said.
The impoverished community
cannot afford to donate money for the school's repair and a local
business which used to contribute modest amounts before the cyclone,
ended donations after the cyclone destroyed its grinding mill and
beer outlet, Sithole said.
During the rainy
season, from November to April, lessons are routinely disrupted
and "trained teachers shun the school because of the poor working
conditions, forcing us to work mostly with those that are unqualified."
A recent government directive has also prohibited unqualified teachers
from teaching.
Sithole said
only a few children from the school managed to qualify for secondary
education, with most dropping out to help with family chores or
participate in cross-border smuggling of second hand clothes and
cane spirits from neighbouring Mozambique.
Bridges
unrepaired
Numerous bridges destroyed
in the province by flooding remain unrepaired, further isolating
already remote communities.
"Transport operators
now shun this area because there are no bridges. We have no option
but to use ox-drawn scotchcarts for transport," 62-year-old
Mandiziwa Mabika, a village elder from Chipinge, told IRIN.
The sick are ferried
by these carts to Mount Selinda Hospital, the nearest clinic about
60km away, but many people have died during the journey, Mabika
said.
"We don't have shops
from which to buy basic commodities because our area is not easily
accessible. That means we have to travel long distances on foot
to buy such small items as salt and matches," Mabika said.
Apart from the illegal
cross-border trade activities, there are few income generating activities
for villagers.
A communal irrigation
scheme under which villagers grew vegetables for sale in Chipinge
was abandoned when the dam from which the locals drew water was
damaged but "even if the dam was repaired, it would still be
difficult for us to transport our produce to the markets",
Mabika said.
No money,
no recovery
John Robertson, an economist
based in the capital Harare, told IRIN the cyclone coincided with
the start of the country's 10-year economic decline after President
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF government instituted its "ill-advised"
fast track land reform programme which redistributed more than 4,000
white commercial farms to landless blacks.
The violence associated
with both the land programme and subsequent elections damaged the
country's reputation and discouraged investment.
"If you consider
the extent of the damage caused by floods in such countries as Mozambique
[in 2000], Zimbabwe did not experience irreparable destruction and
repairs should not have taken this long to be done," he said.
Robertson said the land
reform programme led to a decline in tax revenue because it destroyed
many businesses related to agriculture, one of the country's biggest
sectors, making it difficult for the government to source money
for disaster recovery.
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