Catherine Philp in Harare
Enter our Snapshots of Summer photography competition

Lina thought that the streets of Harare were paved with gold, so it was there that she begged the bus driver to take her when her parents died leaving her an orphan in Zimbabwe's destitute rural west.
Princess came to the city after she was thrown out by the new wife her stepfather took after her own mother died from tuberculosis.
Precious came looking for an aunt she had heard was living here, peddling vegetables on the streets for a meagre living.
Lina, then 14, had no money for her fare, so the driver took her virginity as payment. Princess, then 13, sold hers for a loaf of bread after the police stole the peanuts she was selling and chased her off the streets. Precious had already had hers taken from her by a cousin who ambushed her on her way to school and raped her. So she was no longer a virgin when, at 14, she followed the others into prostitution, selling herself to strangers on the streets of Harare merely to survive.
“They are the chaff that has blown in here,” said the church worker who took The Times to meet the girls in the slums of Harare. “Nobody cares about them at all.”
The story of the children peddling their bodies for pennies is the story of Zimbabwe's rural poor. Ground down into a state of dependent impoverishment, the collapse of the country's rural economy has left them more desperate than ever. The Aids crisis, and the creaking health system it has overwhelmed, has left hundreds of thousands of children orphans, struggling to fend for themselves. As once-prime farmland fell back into bush, thousands picked up their few belongings and headed for the cities in search of a better life.
Lina came to the slums from far-flung Matabeleland, where President Mugabe sent his troops in the early Eighties to put down opponents, wiping out entire villages. It has been punished for its opposition ever since.
“I came to Harare because I thought people were rich here,” she said. But at the bus station people told her to go to the slums of Mbare, where “people like me” slept on the streets. She saw people hawking drinks, vegetables and nuts and thought she would do that too. But she had no money to start with and there was none to be earned begging. “That's when one of the other girls taught me to stand on the streets.”
Princess fared better, finding a vendor willing to employ her selling her vegetables in the street. But then came Mr Mugabe's social project, Operation Murambatsvina, or “Clean Up Trash”, a brutal push to clear the streets of peddlers and squatters and deny his opposition urban support. More than 600,000 people were made homeless in the purge.
The clear-up deprived Princess of her legitimate if meagre livelihood, forcing her to more desperate measures. “The police chased us and beat us if they found us selling,” she said. “And then they would steal what we had to sell.” In debt to her supplier, she had only one option. “The last thing I had to sell was myself.”
That was two years ago and the money she got for her first client could buy her a loaf of bread. Now it can barely do that. Sex with one of Mbare's street girls costs Z$10 million (25p) — when the customers actually pay. “I'll have about four or five a day,” Princess said. “Out of that, maybe two will pay.” The police do not chase her any more, but they still steal, demanding sex in return for leaving her alone.
Amine, one of the girls who works the streets with Princess, showed a fresh scar on her hand where a customer had stabbed her, forcing her to drop the notes that he had just paid her.
Precious, a tiny 16-year-old, stunning beneath the grime, sees as many as ten men a day, and mostly they pay. But often when she wakes up in the morning, beneath the plastic sheeting she uses for shelter, she finds her money has vanished, stolen by a client or a jealous friend.
“My money is disappearing,” she said. “I am doing this for nothing at all. Sometimes I wake in the morning and I have nothing, not even a piece of soap to wash, and my belly is sore from no food.” Along with the hunger, fear stalks the girls. Zimbabwe's HIV rate runs at 15 per cent and few of the men that buy their services wear condoms. “Sometimes they threaten you and say 'If you try to make me wear a condom I'll beat you',” said Treatmon, who came to Harare to work on the streets a year ago when she was orphaned at 13.
“To begin with I was happy to do it because I had money and I could eat. But now I see girls dying of Aids and so I expect to die with Aids too.”
Elections this weekend herald a momentous moment in Zimbabwe's history, holding out the possibility of an end to the three decades of Mr Mugabe's rule that have driven these children to the streets — and the country to the brink. It remains to be seen if having stolen the girls' past Mr Mugabe will also rob them of their future.
His machinery is in place to steal the vote as before, but this time even that may not be enough to mask the groundswell of discontent. The chance of change has gilded the elections with mythic status, a panacea for ills that even a new president cannot hope to change.
It is two years since Precious went back to Lower Gwelo: the cousin who raped her is out of jail and swearing vengeance, and she is too afraid to return. “I miss my granny,” she said. “Maybe after elections things will be more stable and I can go home.”
Win a luxury weekend to Newcastle and its neighbour Gateshead, find out more here
Risk, resilience and embracing new technology
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
Discover the collective power of smart thinking. Submit a solution and be in with a chance to win a Flip MinoHD Camcorder
The inside track on current trends in the charity, not for profit and social enterprise sectors
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Make the most of the summer and enter our fabulous photographic competition, you could win a £5000 holiday
Corsica is an island of beauty and contrast, an ideal holiday destination
Enjoy further reading from Travel to Fashion, Business to Sport, discover more
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
The clever way to lease a new car is with Car leasing made simple™
2009
42,945
2008
71,450
Car Insurance
Not Specified
MI6
UK-based
£60,000
The Environment Agency
Bristol
Up to £90K
Boots
Midlands
OTE £85k
Credit Protection Association
Nationwide Opportunities
Completely London
Luxury Condo's in Manhattan with NYC views
The best new homes in Wimbledon?
Nationwide
Save up to £1,000 per couple with Elite Vacations at the five-star Constance Lemuria Resort
and do the British Isles this Summer.
Save up to 60% with Oxford Hotels and Inns
Try our inspiring luxury holidays to the Indian Subcontinent and South East Asia.
Great offers available
8 fabulous Canadian cities ...you won’t find cheaper
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths | Subscriptions | E-paper
News International associated websites: Globrix Property Search | Property Finder | Milkround
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
If you can help these girls, do it. I doesn't cost much to help if you like in the western world. This type of prostitution is everywhere including some bad areas in the UK, USA and all of EU. Bush and his EU friends won't fight Mugabe simply because Zimbabweans are not Terrorists! Rhodesia failed!
Freda, Leicester, UK
Yes ,things maybe bad in Zimbabwe and other places on the African continent ,but Europe/U.S ought to recall the atrocities that they committed against that land and it's people for centuries. Every european took part in Africa's plunder,now they all want to cast moral judgement against the remnace
nigel, New York, U.S.A
Sadly, power and wealth drives humanity, not compassion for our fellow man. We learn nothing from the past. No wonder I'm an atheist. I am sick to death of the corruption and violence, the brutality, but short of extinction, I can't see the human race changing.
A.Barry, Andover, UK
Oh of course - bring back Rhodesia - lets get a bunch of old white men to run the place since they do such a grand job everywhere else. How about all you high and mighty conservatives stop viewing Mugabe's disgusting tyranny as an opportunity to pat yourselves on your chubby backs, and start thinking constructively about how Zimbabweans can form a viable alternative to Mugabe.
George, Bristol, UK
Rightly or wrongly, the UK and US stepped in to remove Saddam Hussain for his "Crimes against hummanity", yet they stand by and do nothing for Zimbabwe - They have allowed this tyrant to continue to destroy his country, rivals and people.
Surely the lack of action from UK and US governments goes some way to proving that the start of the Iraq War was more about Oil and less aboout freedom and the rights of the people?
Sonja, UK,
To kill a tyrant is not a crime. Stop Mugabe. NOW!
radovan Simek, prague, Czech Republic
Dont trust churches with helping these people. They dont need more dogmatic preaching from people who hide from the world behind a set of laws. People need religious laws and restriction from bibles or other religious teachings because they are afraid of the world.
The pope has condemed the use of condoms.
Obviously these children need to be off the streets as soon as possible, but if that cant happen instantaneously then at least lets make sure that the people "helping" them arent telling them the one way to stay safe from aids is evil...
m, harrogate,
I think it is time that the media start to take a bit more responsability for humanity. After all, this newspaper is making money based on reporting these poor girls' story so there should be something given back.
When I read these articles I feel like helping whoever it is that is behind these stories but I don't want to make a contribution to a charity: I want to be able to help them directly, as best as I can, shy of given them help in person.
The journalists that report these cases (at loss of a better word) should find a contact or someone that can help, locally, and this way contribute a little towards improving the world and balancing the fact that their livelihood depends on these 'cases'.
Give us the contact of a local priest or missionary that will help these girls. What can we expect of these girls when they turn into young women, that is if they don't die of AIDS before that...?
What a sad existence!
IK, London,
Bring back Rhodesia. The present scum could not organise a booze up in a brewery.
John, London, UK
Thank you for reporting this.
All you bleeding white liberals, now in your 50's and 60's, that spat on Rhodesia and supported this murderous scum Mugabe - here is your victory.
Liberation struggle indeed.
Jesus wept.
Andrew, Sarasota, FL