Sunday Times

Hunger stalks lockdown children

Mother trapped, so her kids are forced to scrounge for food

- By GRAEME HOSKEN

● For eight weeks, three siblings in Vlakfontei­n, south of Johannesbu­rg, survived on food scraps from neighbours and cabbages grown next to their shack.

The children, aged between 10 and 17, were found by social workers last week while checking on poor families in the area.

“They were starving,” said Mashudu Nemusunda, a clinical social auxiliary worker at the Teddy Bear Clinic for Abused Children.

“Their eyes were sunken. For days they would eat nothing.”

Their situation is not unique. Experts say cases of hunger and malnutriti­on have increased during the lockdown.

The children’s mother has been trapped by the lockdown 600km away in a village outside Empangeni, KwaZulu-Natal, for the past eight weeks — first by the travel ban, then because she ran out of money.

A week before the lockdown, she went to Empangeni to bury her brother. She managed to return, but three weeks later she had to go back to Empangeni to bury her sister, using the last of her money.

“Some nights we would not eat. Sometimes it was just cabbage which we ate,” the eldest son told the Sunday Times.

With no money, his neighbours’ own food security stresses rising, and a barren vegetable garden, he walked nearly 15km two weeks ago to take his brother and sister to his aunt’s shack, where she lives with her four young children.

“I had to take them. I couldn’t grow any more food. The neighbours have no more food for us.”

The children are now being provided with food by the NGO.

Meanwhile, in Mpumalanga, cases of hunger and malnutriti­on among children have increased dramatical­ly, according to André Hattingh of Pediatric Care Africa.

“Before lockdown we were helping 350 kids a month with food. Now we are assisting at least 2,000 children a month.”

He said that before the lockdown the organisati­on was seeing about 25 malnourish­ed children a month, but that number had jumped to 200 in lockdown.

“Today [Friday] we saw 18 malnourish­ed children in the Magalela informal settlement outside White River. That was just in the one informal settlement that we went to today.

“The levels of malnourish­ment (sic) and hunger have spiked. It’s truly terrifying. There was always hunger but the lockdown has multiplied it. It’s now a thousand times worse.”

Shaheda Omar, director of the Teddy Bear Clinic, said malnutriti­on and hunger numbers were going through the roof across SA under the lockdown.

“Daily we receive calls for help for food. Parents and children are starving.

“The plea for food has never been like this before the lockdown. Every day we get at least 15 calls for food from across SA. In the past we would get maybe two calls for food a week.”

A nurse at the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital in Cape Town, which sees patients from across SA, said the lockdown had exacerbate­d the cases and levels of malnutriti­on.

“What we are seeing is a lot worse. In the past we would see cases where children had the early onset of malnourish­ment (sic). Now the malnourish­ment (sic) is heavily exacerbate­d,” said the nurse, who did not want to be named because she is not authorised to speak to the media.

“On a daily basis we receive children and their parents who are malnourish­ed, especially those who come from the rural provinces like Limpopo and the Eastern

Cape. Of the 60 to 100 children we see in the outpatient­s department daily, at least 30 are battling malnourish­ment (sic) and hunger. It’s the same with parents.”

In April, surveys by the University of Johannesbu­rg

and the Human Science Research Council (HSRC) pointed to growing levels of hunger under the lockdown, with up to 55% of informal settlement and township residents having no money to buy food.

The surveys followed a report in March by Stats SA listing malnutriti­on as the fourth leading underlying natural cause of death for children.

Clinical dietitian researcher Esmarie van

Tonder, of the Nelson Mandela University’s dietetics department, who studied malnutriti­on in adult patients admitted to Port Elizabeth’s public hospitals over the past three years, said the lockdown and job losses had aggravated food insecurity and raised people’s risk of malnutriti­on.

“We are likely to see an increase in the prevalence of malnutriti­on during the pandemic,” said Van Tonder.

The SA Civil Society for Women’s, Adolescent­s’ & Children’s Health — a coalition of various civil society organisati­ons — said that while it was heartening that food parcels were being handed out, not all these parcels were nutritiona­lly optimal.

“Many of the household food packs have, unfortunat­ely, not been tailored for the nutritiona­l needs of children,” said the coalition’s chair, Precious Robinson.

“Covid-19 is a threat to health and a major global disrupter.

“However, hunger has shown itself to be a more tangible threat.

“We need to ensure sufficient and sustainabl­e food supplies are made available to vulnerable communitie­s.”

 ?? Picture: Alon Skuy ?? A child walks along a path in the barren settlement of Vlakfontei­n, south of Johannesbu­rg. He is among the children who have not been getting regular nourishmen­t and have been helped by the Teddy Bear Clinic for Abused Children.
Picture: Alon Skuy A child walks along a path in the barren settlement of Vlakfontei­n, south of Johannesbu­rg. He is among the children who have not been getting regular nourishmen­t and have been helped by the Teddy Bear Clinic for Abused Children.
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