Xoliswa Sithole is a South African film-maker based in Johannesburg. She was awarded a BAFTA, for her role in producing the BBC/True Vision documentary Orphans of Nkandla, chronicling the effects of Aids in Africa. She released a film called Zimbabwe's forgotten children showcasing the struggle children face.
Zimbabwe, when Xoliswa was growing up there, was the breadbasket of Africa and had one of the best education systems in Africa if not the world according to Xoliswa Sithole. The healthcare system was great, too.

Zimbabwe: Harare's street kids
There are also the street children. When Xoliswa Sithole lived in Zimbabwe in his twenties, there were hardly any street children in Harare.Children are now not only living on the streets, they are giving birth on the streets. A second generation of street children is growing up.The system was supposed to take care of its people, but it has failed.
BBC
For a child born in apartheid-era South Africa, as I was, it was a land of opportunity. After my mother moved to Rhodesia, I received a first-class education, and graduated from university in post-independence Zimbabwe. It is startling how quickly a society can fall apart.
Xoliswa Sithole's film, Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children, follows the stories of a number of children struggling to survive in the country today.
Zimbabwe has become a very hard place to be poor, and poverty is ugly. Conspicuous consumerism is very evident, and greed is also very visible.
He shot the film undercover, after getting a permit to make another film, about my childhood and how it has shaped me.

Esther with her mother and baby sister
Xoliswa Sithole was raised as a child of the Zanu party. His stepfather's cousin Ndabaningi Sithole, founder of Zanu, was a prominent politician, and hiscousin Edison Sithole the first doctor of law in southern and central Africa - he disappeared in 1975, abducted by Ian Smith because he was a human rights lawyer and political activist.
But while Xoliswa Sithole was making this film the Zimbabwean government launched Operation Murambatsvina (Remove the filth) - a slum clearance programme that left thousands of people on the streets.
Xoliswa Sithole's film, Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children, follows the stories of a number of children struggling to survive in the country today.
Zimbabwe has become a very hard place to be poor, and poverty is ugly. Conspicuous consumerism is very evident, and greed is also very visible.
He shot the film undercover, after getting a permit to make another film, about my childhood and how it has shaped me.
Esther with her mother and baby sister
Xoliswa Sithole was raised as a child of the Zanu party. His stepfather's cousin Ndabaningi Sithole, founder of Zanu, was a prominent politician, and hiscousin Edison Sithole the first doctor of law in southern and central Africa - he disappeared in 1975, abducted by Ian Smith because he was a human rights lawyer and political activist.
But while Xoliswa Sithole was making this film the Zimbabwean government launched Operation Murambatsvina (Remove the filth) - a slum clearance programme that left thousands of people on the streets.
This made Xoliswa Sithole resolute to make another film, about Zimbabwe's children. He focuses mostly on three stories.
There are Michelle and Grace, who live with their father Joseph. Joseph dreams of saving enough money to pay for his children's education, but for now they all work - by digging bones from a rubbish heap and selling them.
"What I am doing is child abuse really," he says. "They should not be working like this. It hurts me."
There is Esther, who looks after her mother as she dies of Aids, and also her younger brother, Tino.
After her mother dies, Esther's life becomes simpler. "It's much easier to look after Tino now, because I don't have to look after mum as well," she says. Esther's case is not an unusual one in today's Zimbabwe. It's a common scenario.
"What I am doing is child abuse really," he says. "They should not be working like this. It hurts me."
There is Esther, who looks after her mother as she dies of Aids, and also her younger brother, Tino.
After her mother dies, Esther's life becomes simpler. "It's much easier to look after Tino now, because I don't have to look after mum as well," she says. Esther's case is not an unusual one in today's Zimbabwe. It's a common scenario.
Zimbabwe: Harare's street kids
There are also the street children. When Xoliswa Sithole lived in Zimbabwe in his twenties, there were hardly any street children in Harare.Children are now not only living on the streets, they are giving birth on the streets. A second generation of street children is growing up.The system was supposed to take care of its people, but it has failed.
In less than a generation, the country has changed beyond all recognition.
BBC
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