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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / AIDS / December 2006

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cull them colored folks

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Death - 06 Dec 2006 00:49 GMT
Daniel Howden, Independent (UK), Nov. 17, 2006

A rusted wire fence divides the old Zimbabwe from the new. On the one side lies Effie Malamba;
born in 1901 she was buried beneath a granite headstone 90 years later. On the other is Sylvia
Ncube; born in 1974 she was laid to rest just 32 years later. The wire separates Bulawayo's old
Hyde Park cemetery from the extension opened this February.

Effie lies amid ordered ranks of stone epitaphs. Sylvia lies in a chaos of churned earth. All
around her the mounds of mud and stones, garlanded with plastic flowers, tell the story of the
shocking disintegration of Zimbabwe, which now has the lowest life expectancy for women
anywhere in the world: 34.

A forest of black metal plates marks the mounting death toll and their hand-painted white
numbers record the birth dates of a missing generation. Thulan Sabanda, born 1972; Ozia Moyo in
1971, Lulu Olomo in 1975, are just three of hundreds.

The World Health Organisation has plotted this precipitous fall in women's mortality in the
former British colony from 65, little more than a decade ago, to today's low. Speaking
privately, WHO officials admitted to The Independent that the real number may be as low as 30,
as the present figures are based on data collected two years ago.

The reasons for this plunge are several. Zimbabwe has found itself at the nexus of an Aids
pandemic, a food crisis and an economic meltdown that is killing an estimated 3,500 people
every week. That figure is more than those dying in Iraq, Darfur or Lebanon. In war-torn
Afghanistan, where women's plight has received global attention, life expectancy is still above
40.

This cull is not an act of God. It is a catastrophe aggravated by the ruthless, kleptocratic
reign of Robert Mugabe, in power since independence in 1980. The Mugabe regime has succeeded in
turning a country once stated as the breadbasket of Africa into a famished and demoralised land
deserted by its men of working age, with its women left to die a silent death.

With the state in collapse, the evidence of this tragedy is necessarily anecdotal.
At Hyde Park, one of many cemeteries in one of many towns, the grave diggers are tired. They
say they are carving up to 25 graves a day from the baked earth, more than double the figure
earlier in the year.

Twenty-six-year-old Shenghi, like almost every other Zimbabwean, is a member of a burial
society-a kind of morbid Christmas club. These savings associations bring people together to
meet the costs of burying their sons, daughters, sisters and brothers at a rate that's
accelerating beyond comprehension. "In the last three months we've had to bury 14 of the 50
people in our society," she says.

Zimbabwe is now a place haunted by incomprehensible numbers: 85 per cent of the population
living in poverty; 80 per cent unemployment; 90 per cent HIV infection rates in the army and
most unbelievably, 2,000 per cent inflation.

In this man-made chaos it is the women, bottom of the social heap, who are suffering the most.
The men have the option of leaving children to jump the border into South Africa. Many return
only to be buried but at 37 years, their life expectancy remains marginally higher.

Eighteen months ago the government launched operation Murambatsvina-Drive Out the Trash-a
vicious offensive aimed at the poorest sectors of society.

Hundreds of thousands of families were made homeless in slum clearances and street vendors were
arrested, robbed and driven out of business. Shari Appel, from the NGO Solidarity Peace Trust,
says that trauma is killing people before their time: "The stress and misery mean people are
keeling over and dying. The health system has totally collapsed. Now access to education is
going the same way and girls are the first to miss out. In the overcrowding, domestic violence
and sexual abuse are rife."

Amen is 33 years old. Lying on a stained sheet in an Aids hospice outside the country's second
city, Bulawayo, she is waiting to die. Her body is covered in the tell-tale sores of full-blown
Aids. She has three children staying with her sister in Plum Tree. It is only an hour's drive
away but she has not seen them once since checking in four months ago as no one has money for
transport.

Anna, 25, gets to see her children. Proud is eight, and out at school, Agrippa, six, is at home
along with his sister, 18-month-old Violet. Home is a one-room shack with no running water or
electricity. Violet is sitting on the bed that takes up half of the living space. Like her
mother and brothers, she is covered in sores, her scalp is ringed with white scabs.

There's no money to get a doctor to tell Anna what she already knows-they all have Aids.

With proper health care and access to anti-retrovirals (ARVs) HIV sufferers can now live with
the disease for decades.
But in Zimbabwe the health system is disintegrating. Pledges of free ARVs from the government
contrast with the reality of corrupt, incompetent and threadbare health care for those with
money-for those without it is completely out of reach.

State hospitals are unofficially charging to see patients, dispensaries are empty and the brain
drain has seen almost every qualified nurse or doctor leave. Even dying comes at a cost.
Families wanting to collect a relative's body must provide a coffin in order to claim them.
Many simply cannot afford this.

The result is on show at the hospital mortuary in Nkayi in the north of Matabeleland. Its
imposing metal fridge has only one working motor, so the bodies are kept just a few degrees
below the boiling daytime temperature outside. Its nine berths are home to at least a dozen
cadavers. Only a few are fresh enough to be swollen. The others have decomposed inside the
clothing that was never taken off them. The stench is appalling.

When asked how long they had been there, the hospital guard shrugs and replies: "More than a
year." Apart from the funeral parlours the only thing that is booming is the secret police-the
Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO). Its swollen budget, many
times higher than health spending, has enabled its network of informers and enforcers to keep a
lid on almost all resistance. They have been credited with infiltrating the main opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, which tore itself apart this year, splitting into rival
factions.

It no longer threatens a repeat of the election win it credibly claims Mr Mugabe stole from it
two years ago.

In this climate of fear and despair, it is a women's group that has
consistently defied the regime to go out on to the streets and protest. Women of Zimbabwe Arise
(Woza) was set up three years ago and its founder, businesswoman Jenni Williams, has been
arrested countless times and had her life threatened on several occasions.
Despite this there are now an estimated 30,000 members, who are
demonstrating for basic rights including access to food, education and healthcare. And so far
Woza's strict creed of non-violence has made it hard for authorities to crack down on it too
viciously. "It's very hard for a policeman to intimidate us when his mum, his sister, or his
girlfriend is there as one of us. It's embarrassing for them," Ms Williams says. "I'm very
proud to be a Zimbabwean woman right now. Why should a woman carry all these burdens and be
silent?"

Some names have been changed to protect individuals.
Nation's decline 4m The amount the population is thought to have fallen since the last census
in 2002. Current estimates put it as low as 8 million.

Life expectancy for women. It was 65 just over a decade ago. It is much lower than in
neighbouring countries: in Zambia, life expectancy for women is 40; in Mozambique, 46; in
Botswana, 40; in South Africa, 49.

120/1000 The infant mortality rate. During the 1990s, it was 61/10-00.

7,000 The cost in Zimbabwean dollars of a dose of anti-retroviral drugs to combat Aids.

50% The amount Zimbabwe's economy has shrunk since 1999.
2000% The rate of inflation in Zimbabwe. In 1980, when the country became independent, the rate
was 7 per cent.

73m The size of Zimbabwe's tobacco output in millions of tonnes. In 2000 it was 734 million.
Life - 06 Dec 2006 15:31 GMT
> Daniel Howden, Independent (UK), Nov. 17, 2006
>
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> expectancy for women
> anywhere in the world: 34.

When Rhodesia was in its glory days, it was the white folk who
made it happen - then came along the true racemongers who
insisted that the country be taken over by a bunch of corrupt
niggers.

Isn't it always interesting to unmask the TRUE racists - just
like this newsgroup, they are the ones who are the first to
throw out the "racist" label (e.g. George Mary "Chimpy"
Carter, Moira and all the other self-adulating pharma
do-gooders).
Death - 07 Dec 2006 00:44 GMT
"Life" <Life@life.com> wrote in message

> " Death" <Death@yourdoor.net> wrote in message
> >
[quoted text clipped - 26 lines]
> Carter, Moira and all the other self-adulating pharma
> do-gooders).

They wear their ignorance of the real world like a badge of honor.
Life - 09 Dec 2006 18:55 GMT
> "Life" <Life@life.com> wrote in message
>>
[quoted text clipped - 34 lines]
>>
> They wear their ignorance of the real world like a badge of honor.

No Chimpy. I'm just a realist. YOU are the racist and still
are too dumb to realize it.
 
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