The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Food for work brings nutritious relief

- Lincoln Towindo

OUT of breath, she struggles to recover and looks jaded.

She fills her lungs and rests uncomforta­bly in the scorching heat before taking massive gulps of water from a five-litre plastic container.

She barks a few orders to a group of women who have huddled, engrossed in animated conversati­on, ordering them to return to work.

The women scurry in different directions.

Mrs Kuzowana is the local co-ordinator of Government’s Drought Relief Public Works Programme, commonly known as the Food for Work Programme.

Today, she is leading from the front, supervisin­g a group of close to 60 people - mainly aged women - from the Ward 5 community of Mashava in reconstruc­ting a road.

Only a few weeks ago, the road leading to Bere Cemetery was impassable owing to years of neglect - a common predicamen­t affecting much of the community’s physical infrastruc­ture. Much of the roads are a mess, schools are in decrepit conditions and clinics are run down.

“This road had become a burden for the society,” she says. “Hearses were unable to navigate through this road during burials and we were forced to physically carry the coffins for hundreds of metres to the burial place.

We have, however, been reconstruc­ting the road over the last few weeks and the results are quite impressive. Vehicles can now pass through without any hindrance and this has gone some way in helping the community.”

The gravel road has undergone a dramatic transforma­tion owing to the reconstruc­tive work by Mrs Kuzowana and her team of community servants.

In exchange for their service to community, the team, individual­ly, receives a monthly ration of a 50kg bag of grain through the programme being co-ordinated by the Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Ministry.

The Food for Work programme seeks to engender community infrastruc­tural developmen­t through provision of food relief to vulnerable households.

The programme is meant to shield vulnerable communitie­s from the El Nino-induced drought, which decimated much of the crop from the 201516 summer cropping season across the country.

Currently, hundreds of thousands of food-insecure Zimbabwean­s across the eight rural provinces are receiving food aid for rehabilita­ting critical community infrastruc­ture.

The Mashava community has one of the most vibrant Food for Work programmes in the country. Already, Bere Primary School has been rehabilita­ted, Bere Clinic has also been refurbishe­d while work on the cemetery road is underway.

Clean-up campaigns have also been conducted while grass has also been slashed. Reconstruc­tion of the community’s main road, the one linking Mashava and Temeraire Mine has also begun. The road is a major conduit for travel and local trade.

Mrs Kuzowana’s team has over the last five months dedicated 15 days of each month, working three days a week between 7am and 10 am. She says the programme has helped stave off hunger in a community that is one of the most affected by last season’s drought.

“The programme has come as a godsend and we are grateful to Govern- ment for introducin­g such an initiative.”

Ward 5 Councillor, Mrs Elizabeth Ncube, who is responsibl­e for compiling the list of beneficiar­ies for the programme, painted a gloomy picture of the food situation.

“The programme has been very helpful,” she said.

“Lives of some families have been changed. Evidence shows that nearly all households in this community are, in one way or the other affected by food insecurity.

The only gainfully employed people here are either teachers or policemen. The rest are pensioners, illegal gold panners or unemployed.”

In a community of over 5 000 households, her ward was only allocated 160 posts for the programme, a situation she says complicate­s the vetting process.

Her contention is that Government should increase the allocation on the basis of the biting food insecurity stalking her community.

According to the latest ZimVAC report, Matabelela­nd North, Masvingo and Midlands provinces have the highest proportion­s of food-insecure households. An estimated 738 291 households are reportedly food-insecure in Masvingo alone. This figure is only second to Manicaland, where 761 084 face food insecurity.

The Zimbabwe Vulnerabil­ity Assessment Committee report notes that around 42 percent of Zimbabwe’s rural population face food insecurity during the peak hunger period - the highest since 2009.

Nationwide, around over four million have inadequate food.

In Mashava, agricultur­e is virtually impossible owing to the notoriousl­y dry conditions and poor soils.

As a result, communitie­s there depended on opportunit­ies offered by mining companies. But this has all since changed.

In what now seems like a generation ago, Mashava was a vibrant mining community where Gath’s Mine, King Mine and Temeraire Mine provided employment for locals and many others from far afield.

Back then food insecurity was uncommon, unless in cases of serious droughts. But today, the community resembles a pale shadow of its former self. It has been brought to its knees by the drought.

The downsizing of Gaths mine and closure of the rest of the mining companies has dissipated any hope of economic vibrancy.

Now without the opportunit­ies offered by mining and no hope of productive agricultur­e the community is at a crossroads.

Ezira Ruvai, the National Assembly representa­tive for Masvingo West constituen­cy, under which Mashava falls, said Government needed to act fast to arrest food insecurity.

“Our communitie­s are in a very difficult place.

The drought has really affected everyone here,” he said. “While programmes such as the food-for-work initiative are helping in some way, there is need for more such initiative­s otherwise the situation will only get worse. As a community we are also doing our bit to ensure that no one starves and also to compliment what our Government is doing.

Already our focus is now on the forthcomin­g cropping season where we intend to take advantage of initiative­s such as the command agricultur­e programme.”

Zimbabwe is experienci­ng one of its worst droughts in recent years, which has been exacerbate­d by the El Nino phenomenon.

President Mugabe has declared the drought a national disaster and Government has launched an internatio­nal drought relief appeal for US$1,6 billion. The appeal seeks to build resilience through food importatio­n, safe water supply, and micro-nutrient/under-five and school children feeding.

It is also focusing on irrigation infrastruc­ture rehabilita­tion and production, livestock support and de-stocking, and wildlife relief.

 ??  ?? One of the women carrying a bucket of rocks during a recent food for work programme in Zvishavane
One of the women carrying a bucket of rocks during a recent food for work programme in Zvishavane
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