/ 14 December 2004

Elderly pay the price for raising Aids orphans

Until a week ago, elderly Hannah Dube and her five grandchildren living in the dusty village of Kezi in soutwestern Zimbabwe had been surviving on small portions of dried white melon.

Then Zimbabwe’s social services stepped in, handing the 75-year-old Dube emergency aid of the staple corn grain to feed her family, caught in the grip of an HIV/Aids pandemic and a crippling drought.

Her face worn by grief and stress, the aging grandmother’s plight in this remote and rural corner of Zimbabwe tells the story of the burden of many other pensioners in this southern African country where HIV/Aids has turned a million children into orphans.

The UN children’s organisation Unicef estimates that more than one in five children will be orphaned in Zimbabwe by 2010, with more than 80% of those orphaned by HIV/Aids, which kills about 3 000 people per week on average.

Nine of her grandchildren are orphaned — she is looking after five children between the ages of five and 13.

Three successive years of drought in this naturally dry region some 600km southwest of the capital, characterised by unproductive soils, and a political and economic crisis have exacerbated food shortages.

”We only eat one meal a day,” said Dube, who lives in a hut next to a dusty road, where her cooking fire has long since gone out.

”We are used to it now and there is nothing unusual about it,” she said.

While food is available in the shops, people like Dube and her family, who have no source of income whatsoever, cannot even dream of buying any.

Driving up to Dube’s home along a narrow dust road, hundreds of people, dangling empty sacks, were seen walking back home, looking tired, hungry and dejected.

They are coming from the local business centre where they had gone to register their names for food aid to be handed out three days later.

”We were told [by an international aid organisation] to come and register our names for food coming next week. But now they say only those on the old list will be given food,” Dube said.

The Zimbabwean government this year turned away foreign food aid, saying the country produced enough to feed its people.

But Harare has recently allowed the United Nations World Food Programme to undertake a one-off free food distribution to get rid of its stock left over from April when the government stopped general food aid.

Volunteer workers confirm the hunger in the area.

”It is depressing to go out there visiting the sick, handing out a few bars of soap, diapers, some antiseptic solutions — but seeing that what is urgently needed is food,” said volunteer Georgina Tshabalala.

Dube is not only struggling to provide food for her orphaned grandchildren, but also shelter.

She cleans up grass that fell while she was thatching the roof of her new mud and pole hut in this remote rural area of Zimbabwe.

With nobody to help her build or maintain their home, Dube has to risk climbing onto the roof to patch it up before the rains bring it down.

Inside, the fire has gone out.

Dube said besides the fact that their one meal has already been cooked, she could not afford to keep the fire going because she does not have the energy to regularly go to the bush to cut down firewood.

The elderly woman — old and weak enough to be a dependent herself — said she had no choice but to look after her some of her grandchildren.

Those who are not under her wing are probably involved in illegal gold mining, rife in the area.

”I don’t really know how they are surviving, but no one helps me with anything. The chickens and the goats you see outside I sell to send these children to school,” she said.

Despite the difficult living conditions and lack of food, one of her grandchildren, Dan, (7), passed his year-end school examinations with A grades. – Sapa-AFP