Zimbabwe Exodus
Photo Title
Zimbabwe Exodus
Photographer/Creator
Dirk-Jan Visser
Caption/Description
(Photo Dirk-Jan Visser: Harare - Zimbabwe: 18-11-2007) Trough the economical malaise Zimbabwe is facing a massive water shortage, especially in the high density areas around Harare where most of the people are unemployed. Here a natural water spring in the high density area of Tafara Mabvuku outside Harare where women queuing getting water. The Political and economical crisis in Zimbabwe is getting at an alarming rate and becoming worse every day. President Robert Mugabe is with his leading political party ZANU-PF ruling the country as a dictator what results in a growing international isolation. Zimbabwe, once the granary of Africa is expecting an inflation rate of 4600 percent at the end of this year. 85 percent of the population is unemployed over 4 million people are starving every day. Every month thousand of peoples are dying because of the effects of HIV/AIDS, shortages of food and the devastation in the medical sector. Because of the rising inflation, the shortages of food and fuel and the arrests of people who are demonstrating against the regime, a true exodus arised to neighbour countries, especially to South Africa. According the International Red Cross everyday around 8000 people arriving from Zimbabwe in South Africa. In November 2007 I visited Southern Africa to make a photo reportage on the diaspora from Zimbabwe. I started my journey in Zimbabwe to find out that the people are leaving there country because of the economical malaise which results in a food shortage a lake of cash and the bad medical treatment. Most of them cross the border with South Africa illegally by getting over the Limpopo river, which is overloaded with crocodiles, gangs who rob and rape them and military who hunt them down. When these people reach the other site they desperately want to go to Johannesburg, the city of hope. When they managed to reach Johanneburg these people find out that the reality is different than they expected. A lot of them can not find a job or the ones who do, getting under paid most of the time. They are homeless and find a place to sleep in the Methodist church down town Johannesburg, which is packed every night. People back home expect money and food of them because they managed to reach the promise land.
Citation
Dirk-Jan Visser, "Zimbabwe Exodus," in POYi Archive, Item #43204, http://archive.poy.org/items/show/43204 (accessed November 25, 2024).