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Photo: World Food Programme
People queue up for food in Chindobe
District, Zimbabwe. The drought has meant that their food
production was meager.
Hunger
Crisis in Chindobe District, Zimbabwe
Richard Lee
More than 60 percent of the
population in Zimbabwe's western region of Hwange require
food relief. The World Food Programme's Richard Lee visited
the district of Chindobe.
Chindobe, Sept 2- Shading her youngest daughter
from the glare of the bright winter sun, Silendeni Mpala
waits patiently for the food aid truck to arrive.
Gathered around her are hundreds of other men and women from
villages across the district. They have all trekked for
miles through the dusty bush to reach Chindobe primary
school, where they will receive their monthly ration of
relief food.
"We did not harvest any maize at all this year because
of the drought," Mpala said.
"Luckily, we still have a few pumpkins left but they
will run out in the next few weeks and then we will have
absolutely nothing to eat except for the food that we are
given."

"What can I do? There
is no food, no work. Nothing! Even with this maize
my family will be hungry. Without it, we would
die."
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| Silendeni
Mpala, mother of eight |
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Silendeni lives in the nearby village
of Chindobe 3 and has a family of eight to feed, including
her sick husband.
Unable to lay her hands on any other source of food or on
any way of making money, Silendeni admits that her family's
future is now utterly dependent on food aid.
"What can I do? There is no food, no work.
Nothing!" she said. "Even with this maize my
family will be hungry. Without it, we would die."
Nearby 65-year-old Maggie Khumalo shakes her head - not in
disagreement or disbelief but in despair. She has lived in
this part of southwestern Zimbabwe all her life and cannot
believe how desperate the situation has already become.
"This is the worst it has ever been," Khumalo
said. "Very few people harvested anything at all and
most of that is now finished. And even the maize we are
given is only enough for one meal a day. And this month it
ran out early. For the last two days, my four grandchildren
and I have had nothing to eat but pumpkins."
ENERGY SAVING
A short while later, a truck laden with maize provided by
World Food Programme (WFP) pulls in through the school gates.
A few women dance briefly in celebration but the rest sit
still, saving their energy for the walk home. And it is not
just the adults who are forced to marshal their strength.
The 328 children at Chindobe primary school have also had
many of their afternoon activities scaled back.
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"We had to stop some of our core
curriculum activities like soccer and netball because the
children don't have the energy," said the school's
headmaster, Reason Ncube. "They need all their strength
for classes and for the walk home after school."
DAILY DOSE
Fortunately, Chindobe primary school is covered by a
supplementary feeding program, which is run by a local
non-government organization (NGO), the Organization of Rural
Associations for Progress (ORAP), and funded by the British
government.
Every day, the children receive a liter of a nutritious
drink known locally as Mahewu. It was only intended to
provide some additional nutrition and an extra incentive to
stay in school, but their daily dose of Mahewu has now
become the main meal for many of the children of Chindobe.
And when supplies run out, the effect is immediately
apparent.
"When there is no Mahewu, the children stop being able
to concentrate in class, while some of them stop coming to
school altogether," explained Ncube.
"This is a very serious situation and I am worried that
more and more children will drop out in the months to
come."
FEARS
Sitting on a log next to the schoolyard fence, Martin Smart
says that he is worried about much more than his children's
education.
Head of the village of Chindobe 4, Smart fears that his
people will start to die, especially when malaria returns
with the rains.
"At the moment we are coping thanks to the food aid but
the situation will get much worse when the rainy season
starts in October," said Smart.
And unlike in the past, the people of
Chindobe have no means of making any money to help them buy
extra food or medicines.
VICTORIA FALLS
Previously, they could count on earning some cash from the
tourist industry at nearby Victoria Falls, either through
casual labor or selling curios. But not now.
Over the past two years, Zimbabwe's once-booming tourist
industry has slackened off.
"In 1992, there was also no food but then we could make
money from the tourists at Vic Falls," said Smart.
"But this year, there are no tourists and there is no
way for us to make any money."
On top of that, the desperate people of Chindobe cannot even
sell their remaining livestock.
Prices have already hit rock bottom but no one is buying
because the animals are in such poor condition. Indeed, some
cows have already died. And it is still a few months until
the rains return to replenish the area's grazing land.
FOOD AID
Looking tired after helping to unload
the bags of maize, Jonathan Ncube explains that he has
thought seriously about leaving the area.
With no food in the house and no means of supporting his
five children, 49-year-old Ncube says that-- like many
other people-- he considered migrating in search of
work.
However, the deliveries of WFP food aid have kept him in
Chindobe. They have also kept many people alive.
"There are so many starving people here in Chindobe,"
he said, pointing at the long line of men and women
waiting for their maize ration. "Some people
complain that we are not given enough food but it keeps
my children alive. And anyway, if someone gives you a
hand, you shouldn't ask for a whole arm."
But Jonathan Ncube does have one request - that the food
aid continue until the next maize harvest in
April, 2003.
If it doesn't, he has no doubts about what will happen.
"If the food aid stops, people here will start to
die," he said quietly. "I mean it. You will be
burying us in dozens."
"Everyone knows that sickness and hunger go
together and that diseases like malaria are much more
deadly when people are weak."
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