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'We have no food, no work and no money'
Date:
12 Feb 2003
In the city centre, where not many of the buildings —
except the high-rise office blocks along the main streets —
have seen fresh paint in the past decade, they stand in queues
for the better part of the day.
There are mealiemeal queues, bread queues, cooking oil
queues, salt queues and sugar queues. Some streets in the
inner city are forever deserted. All one sees are parked cars
(cars spend more time parked than on the road because of
chronic fuel shortages) and random bits of rubbish blown in by
the wind.
Most people I spoke to said life in Zimbabwe is a lot
harder than it was a year or two ago. The collapse of the
commercial farming sector has left tens of thousands of people
destitute.
A Harare resident said the level of desperation among the
people is very high. "The food situation here is very
worrying indeed, and it is happening in a country that was
once the bread-basket of Southern Africa," he said.
Last week Zimbabwean retail shop owners complained that
poverty has led to a massive increase in shoplifting.
People are committing one offence after another. More than
20 new cases of shoplifting are recorded at most courts each
day. Most cases reported involve theft of basic commodities
such as soap, cooking oil, sugar, clothing and even building
materials.
In Maphisa, about 100km outside Bulawayo, residents
complained that they are forced to eat caterpillars and
maggots because of the food shortage.
"We have no food, no work and no money. How are we
supposed to feed our families now?" asked Mathews Sibanda.
"If you walk around here, you will see that the stomachs
of children are growing bigger and swollen by malnutrition.
"We have no food, no work and no money. How are we
supposed to feed our families now?" asked Mathews Sibanda.
"If you walk around here, you will see that the stomachs
of children are growing bigger and swollen by malnutrition.
We often get food aid, but the distribution is
inconsistent. Some people are also excluded from food aid
because of their political affiliation," he said.
Sibanda said HIV/Aids
worsened the situation in his area. "We have an HIV/Aids
council in the area.
The council is supposed to organise food and clothes for
people affected by the disease. But political differences have
hindered that process. None of the 24 wards in Matobo have
submitted their programmes to the district Aids
coordinator.
"According to statistics about 200 people are dying of
Aids every
month and we have 400 to 500 new infections every month.
Besides that we have orphans who are no longer attending
school. There is a fund which is supposed to support them, but
it is not," he said.
Sibanda said the people in his area also do not have access
to proper health care. "The Maphisa Central hospital has
collapsed. There are no drugs
in the hospital, but you have to pay about Z$120 to be
treated. People do not have any money to go to hospital. A lot
of them die at their homes as they cannot afford to go to
hospital."
Although a local mining operation in the area was providing
jobs for the people, the majority is still unemployed, he
said.
The acute shortage of fuel and the lack of foreign currency
have led to a massive industrial crunch. It has also led to a
massive boom of the so-called black market, which runs a
parallel foreign exchange service.
At the centre of it all is Zimbabwe’s skewed exchange
rate system. The Zimbabwean dollar’s official rate to the
United States dollar stands at Z$55 to US$1. The official
exchange rates for the British pound and South African rand,
are Z$75, and Z$8 respectively.
The massive economic crisis is easy to notice. Industrial
areas in Harare and Bulawayo resemble ghost towns as many
companies have closed shop, shedding hundreds of jobs. In both
cities most supermarket shelves are empty, but massive queues
can still be found throughout the day. The people disperse
only when the shops close for the day.
"You cannot leave the queue because you do not know
when food will arrive. If you move, you will miss out,"
one woman said.
With inflation running at 198%, the incomes of the few who
are still lucky enough to hold on to their jobs have been
severely eroded. An average worker earns between $20 000 and
$30 000, but has to spend about $500 on transport daily ($15
000 a month).
In addition, people have to cope with a transport system
that has collapsed as a result of fuel shortages. Daily a
steady stream of people can be seen walking and cycling along
the road during rush hour in both Harare and Bulawayo. A
number of them say they are tired of waiting long hours for
buses, others say they simply cannot afford the exorbitant
fares
Zimbabwe, as I allowed myself to imagine in the final days
before I went there, would be rowdy and in the terrifying grip
of a barbaric militia, brandishing long knives.
In my imagination there were images of thousands of frail
Zimbabweans thronging the city streets and villages. The
security forces, I imagined, would be stiffly military,
tight-lipped and hostile; anxiously efficient on duty and
abandoned when off.
Reality? A week in Zimbabwe reflected what I had envisaged
and more: glaring mass poverty, a massive economic crisis and
high levels of political intolerance from the ruling party and
its security forces.
On my arrival last Friday, four foreign journalists,
including a reporter for a local daily, were detained by the
police. The following week two South African-based journalists
were arrested for taking pictures of an empty grain silo.
The Zanu-PF militia also stepped up their reign of terror,
torturing opposition members at Kuwadzana near Harare ahead of
a by-election there.
Working as a journalist in Zimbabwe has become a risky
business. The government has enacted new media laws that make
it very hard for journalists, especially foreign ones, to
cover the ongoing crisis in that country.
The laws require local journalists and newspapers to get an
annually renewable "licence", at the discretion of
the government. Foreign journalists are required to get
accreditation before they leave their home countries.
Journalists without accreditation risk being arrested and
deported.
Although I was a bit concerned about the consequences, I
did not try to get the accreditation as it would have been a
futile exercise.
Last year Zimbabwe Information and Publicity Minister
Jonathan Moyo warned that "elements [journalists] who
sneak into the country without accreditation are operating
illegally.
"If caught they might take a long time to go back to
their home country," he said.
Despite my initial qualms I agreed to go. My first stop was
Harare, the capital. The plan was to spend three days there
before I dashed off to Bulawayo.
I landed at Harare International airport with a scrap of
paper in my pocket. On the paper was the name of a person I
was supposedly visiting and his address. After a short
interrogation at the checkpoint the immigration officer
allowed me in.
It was about 8pm. The lights in the airport foyer did not
provide much brightness, but one could still see a string of
portraits of President Robert Mugabe hung on almost every wall
in the airport building.
At the hotel a picture of Mugabe was hammered into the
brickwork in the reception area. Almost every hotel and public
institution has one or two photos of the 78-year-old president
in black suit and large spectacles.
I had witnessed this phenomenon in Kenya last year. I
wonder what the new Kenyan government has decided to do with
former president Daniel arap Moi’s portraits, which were
also a common sight in private and public buildings. The
reader must excuse me for not doing my research on that one.
On my first day in Harare I woke up at 6am. By 7am I was on
the streets. It was a wet and grey Saturday morning. A light
drizzle was falling like confetti, melting into the empty
pavements. There were few signs of life, just the occasional
shriek of taxis and the blistering shunt of buses driving in
and out of the city centre.
Each sound echoed briefly, then was swallowed by the
silence. Some shops on Samora Machel Road were open, but there
was nobody much about.
Harare is a drab city. It has a population of 1,6-million.
The people here rise each day with a glare on their face and
run out to the city, determined to succeed.
In the city centre, where not many of the buildings —
except the high-rise office blocks along the main streets —
have seen fresh paint in the past decade, they stand in queues
for the better part of the day.
There are mealiemeal queues, bread queues, cooking oil
queues, salt queues and sugar queues. Some streets in the
inner city are forever deserted. All one sees are parked cars
(cars spend more time parked than on the road because of
chronic fuel shortages) and random bits of rubbish blown in by
the wind.
Most people I spoke to said life in Zimbabwe is a lot
harder than it was a year or two ago. The collapse of the
commercial farming sector has left tens of thousands of people
destitute.
One of those people is Abraham Banda (46). Banda used to
work on a tobacco farm outside Harare before the white farmer
was forced off the land. With no prospect of employment in the
countryside, Banda, like many other people who once worked on
commercial farms, has drifted to Harare.
He shares a single-bedroom flat with seven other people. He
arrived in Harare eight months ago with the hope of finding a
job. He has not found a position yet.
Banda said he relies on food aid to survive. Every morning,
along with hordes of visibly frail Zimbabweans, he goes to
various churches in Harare hoping to get a meal. He often does
not get one.
"Sometimes I have spent more than three days without
food. I am really suffering. I hope the government can do
something about this problem," he said, adding that he
had once collapsed from hunger while queuing for food.
"I pray every day that someone out there gives me
food. People I know have died in the villages because of lack
of food. I wish that I will not have to die due to
hunger."
A Harare resident said the level of desperation among the
people is very high. "The food situation here is very
worrying indeed, and it is happening in a country that was
once the bread-basket of Southern Africa," he said.
A recent case, in which a man married off his 10-year-old
daughter, despite her protests and threats to commit suicide,
to a 58-year-old friend in return for mealiemeal paints a
stark picture of the level of desperation.
The bridegroom was convicted last week of rape of a minor.
The girl’s father died in a prison cell.
Locals say such cases have become common in the country as
the economic crisis continues to bite. Stories of people
eating worms and grass have been common in the local media in
the recent past.
Last week Zimbabwean retail shop owners complained that
poverty has led to a massive increase in shoplifting.
People are committing one offence after another. More than
20 new cases of shoplifting are recorded at most courts each
day. Most cases reported involve theft of basic commodities
such as soap, cooking oil, sugar, clothing and even building
materials.
In Maphisa, about 100km outside Bulawayo, residents
complained that they are forced to eat caterpillars and
maggots because of the food shortage.
"We have no food, no work and no money. How are we
supposed to feed our families now?" asked Mathews Sibanda.
"If you walk around here, you will see that the stomachs
of children are growing bigger and swollen by malnutrition.
"People are starving here. It is not unusual here for
a person to spend more than four days without food. Children
are often given one meal a day," the 50-year-old said.
The food crisis has affected attendance at the local
school. A teacher at Minda Primary School said some classes
that used to have 100 pupils now have half that number.
Sibanda blamed politicians for the problems in his area. He
should know: he is a former Zanu-PF councillor for Maphisa. He
was fired from Zanu-PF at the end of his term last year for
cooperating with the opposition in his area.
Maphisa is one of the 24 wards in the Matobo District. The
governor of Matobo is Stephen Nkomo, younger brother of the
late Zimbabwean vice-president Joshua Nkomo.
Stephen Nkomo is ill and has been in hospital for the past
three weeks. Mugabe visited him last week, while in Bulawayo
for a meeting with more than 200 traditional leaders.
At the meeting Mugabe promised to give each traditional
leader a car.
"I guess it will not be difficult to buy 266 cars for
our chiefs," the president said. It is not the first time
Zimbabwe’s chiefs have benefited from Mugabe’s regime.
They were recently awarded allowances of Z$50 000 (about R6
250) a month. In addition to the cars, the chiefs will soon
receive cellphones and homes with an electricity supply. Yet
the same chiefs are often accused of worsening the conditions
of the rural poor.
Last week a Zimbabwean daily newspaper carried a front-page
headline: "Chief sells maize as the villagers
starve". The daily claimed that food aid aimed at
villagers was being sold by the chief on the black market. The
chief apparently sold a 10 litre bucket of mealiemeal for Z$5
000.
After the meeting with Mugabe the chiefs pleaded with him
not to retire before the end of his term. "Stepping down
now will be a betrayal of the people," they said.
People in Maphisa disagree with the chiefs’ stance. They
believe Zanu-PF has failed to rule the country. The hopes and
aspirations that political independence promised have been
shattered by Mugabe’s misrule, they say. They also slate
Nkomo for failing to rise above the challenges facing his
district.
Nkomo is not only a politician, he is also a businessman.
He owns the only petrol station in the Matobo District.
When the Mail & Guardian visited the area,
Nkomo’s petrol station was deserted. An old car battery was
pushed neatly out of the way against a wall. There was little
traffic on the road alongside the petrol station and, like so
many other tiny roads snaking nearby, it led nowhere.
The road from Bulawayo to Maphisa was a marvel — it is so
narrow it can only accommodate a single car. There are signs
every 10km warning "deadly hazard".
The tarmac has been worn away in places, revealing the grey
cobblestones of the road underneath. It is not worth
repairing.
Residents said Nkomo’s petrol station has been without
fuel for about seven days. However, they were quick to point
out that the fuel crisis was not a major concern to them.
"People are unemployed and hungry. Every day they
scavenge in the nearby woods for roots and fruit. People eat
almost anything here, including worms," Sibanda said.
He added that food distribution to his area has been
hampered by political infighting.
"We often get food aid, but the distribution is
inconsistent. Some people are also excluded from food aid
because of their political affiliation," he said.
Sibanda said HIV/Aids
worsened the situation in his area. "We have an HIV/Aids
council in the area.
The council is supposed to organise food and clothes for
people affected by the disease. But political differences have
hindered that process. None of the 24 wards in Matobo have
submitted their programmes to the district Aids
coordinator.
"According to statistics about 200 people are dying of
Aids every
month and we have 400 to 500 new infections every month.
Besides that we have orphans who are no longer attending
school. There is a fund which is supposed to support them, but
it is not," he said.
Sibanda said the people in his area also do not have access
to proper health care. "The Maphisa Central hospital has
collapsed. There are no drugs
in the hospital, but you have to pay about Z$120 to be
treated. People do not have any money to go to hospital. A lot
of them die at their homes as they cannot afford to go to
hospital."
Although a local mining operation in the area was providing
jobs for the people, the majority is still unemployed, he
said.
The acute shortage of fuel and the lack of foreign currency
have led to a massive industrial crunch. It has also led to a
massive boom of the so-called black market, which runs a
parallel foreign exchange service.
At the centre of it all is Zimbabwe’s skewed exchange
rate system. The Zimbabwean dollar’s official rate to the
United States dollar stands at Z$55 to US$1. The official
exchange rates for the British pound and South African rand,
are Z$75, and Z$8 respectively.
On the black market the US dollar trades at Z$1 500, the
British pound fetches Z$2 200, and the rand sells at Z$150.
In Bulawayo locals have nicknamed Fort Street, where the
black market operates, the "World Bank of Zimbabwe".
Women operate the "bank". They sit all day on the
pavements waiting for customers. Most of them carry more than
Z$1-million (R125 000) at a time. The only acceptable foreign
currencies are the US dollar, British pound and the South
African rand.
Undercover police patrol the pavements, but they have
failed to curb the activity. The black-market supplies
businesses with foreign currency, which they use to import
goods. In addition to providing a foreign exchange service,
they also sell rare commodities such as mealiemeal and sugar.
They also sell petrol and paraffin.
The black-market prices are, however, beyond the reach of
millions of Zimbabweans. Petrol costs Z$1 000 a litre on the
black market, while the official price is Z$74,47.
The price of petrol was last reviewed in 1999 despite
movement in the price of crude oil, the steep decline of the
Zimbabwean dollar against hard currencies and escalating
inflation.
One car dealer in Harare had the following to say about the
situation: "If you want to go by the formal sector and
the official exchange rates in Zimbabwe, you will be out of
business within minutes, if not seconds. The government’s
price controls on foodstuffs mean that companies are forced to
operate at a loss and eventually they are also forced out of
business.
"The problem is that Zimbabwe’s exchange rate system
is so distorted that for those who are forced to follow it
they find themselves failing to sustain their business
operations," the dealer said.
The massive economic crisis is easy to notice. Industrial
areas in Harare and Bulawayo resemble ghost towns as many
companies have closed shop, shedding hundreds of jobs. In both
cities most supermarket shelves are empty, but massive queues
can still be found throughout the day. The people disperse
only when the shops close for the day.
"You cannot leave the queue because you do not know
when food will arrive. If you move, you will miss out,"
one woman said.
With inflation running at 198%, the incomes of the few who
are still lucky enough to hold on to their jobs have been
severely eroded. An average worker earns between $20 000 and
$30 000, but has to spend about $500 on transport daily ($15
000 a month).
In addition, people have to cope with a transport system
that has collapsed as a result of fuel shortages. Daily a
steady stream of people can be seen walking and cycling along
the road during rush hour in both Harare and Bulawayo. A
number of them say they are tired of waiting long hours for
buses, others say they simply cannot afford the exorbitant
fares.
Many people say they are forced to walk more than 40km a
day to get to work because buses do not always show up. Fuel
woes have also hit cross-border transport operators, who are
forced to charge customers higher prices in order to sustain
their businesses. A trip from Harare to Johannesburg costs
between Z$16 000 and Z$30 000.
Accommodation is also extremely expensive. Rent in the
inner city starts from about Z$10 000, while in the suburbs
the minimum rental for a single room is between Z$3 000 and
Z$4 000. These prices exclude water and electricity.
Houses for sale in the suburbs fetch between Z$20-million
and $40-million. An old 1986 Mazda 323 will set you back
between Z$3-million and Z$5-million and a decent meal for four
people at a restaurant costs more than Z$4 000, without
drinks.
A chicken burger, without chips, at a restaurant fetches
about Z$1 600; a mixed grill at a Spur about Z$6 000 and a can
of Coke about $500. A cup of coffee in Zimbabwe costs Z$400.
The United Nations’s latest report on the humanitarian
situation in Zimbabwe shows that 62% of the country’s
population will be in need of food aid in March. This means
that 7,2-million people in Zimbabwe will go hungry, an
increase from the 6,7-million already surviving on food
handouts.
One thing that is easy to find, however, is beer. A
Bulawayo resident told me if beer runs dry, maybe ordinary
Zimbabweans will know the economy has collapsed. He said it
appears that in the past few years of political chaos and
economic decline, the brewing industry has become the heart of
the Zimbabwean economy.
It is a convincing claim. In almost every village, even the
remotest, the liquor stores were stocked. Even though food is
not reaching villages, beer is. Natisa Village, about 60km
outside Bulawayo, has three liquor stores and one food store
in one small shopping complex.
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