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Harare
street life
Josephine
Gwara,
Institute for War and
Peace Reporting (IWPR)
June 05, 2007
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=336072&apc_state=henh
Chipo Sithole
turns 16 towards the end of this year. Her birthday will mark the
end of her career as a beggar and, very likely, the beginning of
a new life as a prostitute.
"I cannot continue
begging because of my age," she explained. "What normally
happens is that girls of my age graduate from begging to prostitution."
Chipo lives
on the streets of Harare, sleeping in an open-air market. She is
among more than 12,000 street people in the Zimbabwe capital, according
to City of Harare estimates. Deepening poverty and the effects of
Operation
Murambatsvina (clear out the rubbish) continue to haunt Zimbabwe
two years after Robert Mugabe's government bulldozed the dwellings
of the urban poor in a military-style operation condemned worldwide.
The situation is similar
in other urban centres. People have run away from the settlements
they were forced into after the destruction of their homes in the
cities, where districts that voted overwhelmingly for the opposition
were razed to the ground.
Thousands are also fleeing
their drought-stricken rural homes where government has restricted
the distribution of relief aid by non-governmental organisations.
The ripple effects of
Operation Murambatsvina are there for all to see. Those who had
no rural homes to go to were forced into camps, where the government
refused NGOs the right to provide tents and food. Those who've
escaped accuse government agencies of ill-treating them, distributing
donor food on partisan lines and denying them access to government-built
houses.
The youngest amongst
them - street kids - hustle motorists, offering to guard their cars
for a fee. They form a class of their own and have well-defined
territories, which they fiercely guard. Many have lost one or both
parents, mainly as a result of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which claims
3,000 people in Zimbabwe weekly.
The youngest street kids
sleep anywhere they can find space, while many of the older ones
head for the suburb of Mbare, where they stay the night at the local
bus terminus, pretending to be travellers waiting to resume their
journey the following day.
One of the latter is
Fungisai Murape, a victim of Operation Murambatsvina. She shows
receipts, which she guards like treasured possessions, for the rent
she paid for a two-roomed cabin where she lived before it was destroyed
by a bulldozer.
"I have nowhere
to go," she said. "When I was evicted I moved from one
relative to the next but as you know due to the economic hardships,
there is a breakdown of extended families.
"Some were honest
enough to tell me that it was impossible to live with them. There
is a shortage of accommodation in Harare and where it is available,
I can't afford it. So I have resigned myself to living in
the street."
The street kids endure
freezing cold nights in the sleeping areas they refer to as "bases".
Chipo Sithole shares hers in Mbare with six other children, whose
ages range between seven and ten years.
She offers them protection,
for a fee. The children surrender their begging earnings to her,
and she buys the food they eat at night, which depends on the amounts
made that day.
She is not looking forward
to becoming a prostitute. However, the only other choice, she says,
is to continue exploiting her young charges, who need her protection,
mostly from sexual abuse by older street kids and adults.
"It is even tougher
for the younger ones, both boys and girls, because they also have
to deal with rape from fellow street kids and then also these older
men. Some of the kids are picked up while begging at street corners
by men in cars and others are raped where we sleep," she said.
"But because we
have no rights in this country, when we go and report to the police,
they chase us away and don't take our cases seriously. They
first ask where the child lives and when she says on the streets,
they sneer at us and tell us not to bother them because we are from
the streets."
Asked where "her
kids" came from, she said four were orphans and the others
ran away from abusive stepparents.
The government has failed
to deal with the issue of street people and all their interventions
have failed. Some street people have been rounded up more than five
times, but they still find their way back on to the streets of Harare.
Josephine Gwara is the
pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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