Hope not an option for children of Zimbabwe
It is not a nice place to be. This is what Robert Mugabe's socialism has wrought. This is what other African leaders defend when they defend Mugabe's rule. The hopelessness of Zimbabwe does not make television news, because it is harder to do discretely. But the genocide that Mugabe is inflicting on the cheap is pretty real and pretty awful. No one should hold their breath waiting for multilateral diplomacy to do anything about this tragedy.The Mbare Flats in the slums of southern Harare are a complex of bleak, two-storey concrete blocks that make the unprepared visitor recoil in horror.
They are packed with the destitute and violent, rural labourers who have come to the capital in search of work, and those exploiting them — and with government informers.
The windows are smashed. The place stinks. It has open sewers and communal lavatories. Men hawk home-made alcohol.
We hurried across a courtyard, up a staircase and along a corridor, and there we found them — five children huddled in one small, dark room and left to fend for themselves in the most brutal surroundings.
There were three brothers and two sisters, aged 3 to 16, named Wish, Sythia, Dephine, Anesu and Given Nechavava. They looked frightened and bewildered.
The room was lit by a single naked lightbulb and divided by a ragged curtain. At the far end, next to the broken window, was a double bed covered in a filthy blanket on which all five slept.
At the near end were some old, sagging chairs, a primitive stove and a few cooking pots. The floor was bare. Dark green paint peeled off the walls.
The children’s father died of Aids in 2001. Two months ago their mother abandoned them. She simply walked out one night, saying that she was going to Mozambique, and never returned. A church worker found the siblings a fortnight later.
“It was terrible,” he said. They had no food, were very hungry and were begging. They still possess a small framed photograph of their parents, taken in happier times.
The Church is now giving them enough food to survive, employing two as cleaners and sending the other three to school. But these are stop-gap measures. “They have no future,” the local activist who took us into the flats said. “They’ll end up as street kids — the girls as prostitutes, the boys as thieves.” They were already easy prey for sexual predators, she added.
Of all the victims of Robert Mugabe’s regime, the children of Zimbabwe are the most vulnerable and heartrending. Their families have been destroyed by Aids, poverty and emigration. The social welfare systems that might have helped them have collapsed in the country’s economic meltdown. Millions go hungry. Many are severely malnourished.
Unicef estimates that 1.6 million Zimbabwean children, a quarter of the total, are orphans — the highest percentage in the world. The headmaster of a secondary school outside Bulawayo told The Times that a third of his 600 14 to 16-year-old students were parentless, and expected that number to rise by another 100 within a year.
...
Comments
Post a Comment