Mothers in one of South Africa's poorest areas are drinking heavily to deliberately damage their unborn babies
AFRIK UPDATE
HEALTH/Africa
SOUTHAFRICA
Cheap local drink
HEALTH/Africa
SOUTHAFRICA
By Alex Crawford
State benefits mean 250 South African rand
(£20) per child per month for an impoverished family. But disability allowance
is a far more lucrative 1200 rand a month (£85).
Cheap local drink
South Africa has had the highest number of Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) cases in the world since 2002,
according to the World Health Organisation.
Many of the problems link back to the prevalence of illegal
shabeens, or drinking houses, where homemade, highly addictive and damaging
alcohol is sold cheaply. For about two rand (14p), you can buy a litre of
kah-kah as the locals call it.
"If I don't drink this, I'm like someone who is sick,"
Ruth tells us swigging from a transparent bottle containing kah-kah. "I
can't sleep, and I cant think straight but when I have this then I am better
and I can do anything."
Within two sips Ruth (not her real name) was slurring and
dribbling. She staggered up to the door to try to change her baby's nappy
before plonking the child on her lap, letting the baby breastfeed while she
carried on drinking the toxic liquid.
She told me she drank about "five or six bottles a
day" and that this started from "about nine o'clock" in the
morning.
"I don't drink through the day because I have things to
do," she said.
I'm afraid to say I didn't believe her and when we dropped by
her house the following morning, her eight-year-old twins were at home alone
with her 15-year-old daughter.
"She's at the shabeen," we were told.
The police continually conduct raids on the shabeens, closing
them down and throwing away the illegal alcohol. But no sooner one is shut
down, another springs up.
"It's cheap to produce and this represents an income to
these people," Colonel Abdoerahgmaan Humphries told Sky News.
We are with the Gelvendale police team as they raid one of the
shabeens.
The filthy shed is packed full of people, including at least two
women cuddling tiny babies. Most appeared intoxicated.
The police move onto what appears to be a small concrete room
opposite. Against the wall is a brown wooden panel and when the police pull it
down, it reveals a small hole, just big enough for an adult to crawl through.
It opens out into another room which is the brewery. There are three barrels
half filled with a milky brown liquid - the kah-kah. There are also numerous
crates of bottles - all filled and ready to be sold.
"Asse blief bass (please boss)!" the man pleads.
He wants to at least finish his own drink. Most of the brewers are themselves
addicts.
The police take the crates out and pour the liquid away in front
of the assembled residents, many of whom are drunk and now angry.
"Leave them! Leave us! It makes us happy," one of the
women screams at them.
There are several attempts to try to snatch bottles before they
are poured on the wasteground.
The police move off to attend to a shooting elsewhere in the
area.
"They'll be back brewing some more right now," one
says to me as we speed off.
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