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Road to Recovery in the DR Congo?
HelpAge International, September 29, 2003
In the In
the east and north of the country the situation still remains dangerous
and precarious. Surviving
in the forest Sofina
Ndoule, 70, and her six grandchildren live in a decrepit house on the
outskirts of a town near Goma. They spent years on the run after fighting
in their home area, Masisi, forced them to abandon their house, banana
plantation, and livestock. "We
were just living off our wits in the forest. We were always scared. We
were continually moving - in total we must have moved over a hundred
times. We didn't go into villages for fear of soldiers so we just lived
under temporary shelters made out of leaves. Finding food in the forest
was a problem. We used to cultivate lots of small plots of vegetables
hidden in the bush." Now
Sofina's eldest daughter Victorina, 56, who lives nearby helps to provide
for the children. To earn money, she carries bundles of bananas down to Sofina
has no hope of returning to her home. "Even if the area becomes
secure I am now too old and weak to work my land." At least the
children are now safe. Barbabus, 10, says "The best thing about
living here is that I can now sleep properly." After
the lava flow Goma
is still recovering from an additional disaster. In January 2002 a vast
lava flow from Until
the eruption of "We
grew beans and potatoes and we had enough to live on. Then the volcano
came and burnt my house and covered my fields. Since then I have been
suffering here with no means to make a living." Now
the couple live in a house made of plastic sheeting in their son's garden,
among the lava rocks of a previous eruption. Kambere's son works as a
builder earning a meagre US$1-$2 a day. Work is sporadic and he has seven
children as well as his parents to support. A
loan makes a difference In
May this year, Kambere received a micro-credit loan from APIBA, a local
NGO working in partnership with HelpAge International. The loan, designed
to help older people rebuild their lives after the volcano, comes with an
interest rate of only one per cent. "Life
is a little better..." Kambere
decided to give the money to his daughter-in-law, Francoise, to invest in
a small business, which could generate income for the whole family.
Francoise bought a bale of second-hand clothes, which she now sells in the
market place. Whilst business is not easy, Francoise has now bought a
second bale and is making a few dollars a week from it. She is paying back
the loan on schedule. "Life
is a little better than before," says Kambere. "Now I can eat
twice a day as opposed to once, as I did before."
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