Every day, Umm Jihad and her husband must patiently wait in a line
for bread at a Damascus bakery as skyrocketing prices mean they can no
longer afford other essential foods.
"Bread is the main element of our meals because the cost of
everything else has increased so much," Umm Jihad told AFP, adding: "We
are using bread to replace rice," a staple of the Arab diet.
Ordinary citizens of Damascus said they cannot afford to buy fruit
and vegetables as they feel the pinch of soaring inflation fueled by
international sanctions on Syria over its regime's crackdown on dissent.
Outraged by its failure to halt the year-long violence, which the
United Nations says has killed more than 9,000 people, Western and Arab
states have slapped a wide range of punitive measures on Syria.
Rounds of sanctions targeting Syria's banking system and oil exports
have dealt a heavy blow to foreign exchange earnings and stoked the
inflation rate, which official data says reached 15 percent between June
and December.
"I can no longer buy any fruit or vegetables and we now eat bread and
cereals," said Khalil, a 48-year-old doorkeeper who had to wait in line
for 90 minutes to buy bread for his family in the Damascus suburb of
Kanaker.
Khalil said he has five children and needs "more than four kilograms of bread each day."
So every day he wakes up at dawn and makes the round of Kanaker's
three bakeries to stock up on traditional flatbread before he heads to
work.
Umm Jihad says she has worked out a plan with her husband.
"He waits in the men's line and I wait in the women's line, the one
who makes it to the head of the line first buys the bread," she said as
she counted how many people stood in front of her at her neighborhood
bakery.
In the teeming working-class neighborhood of Baramkeh, dozens of seemingly frustrated customers wait their turn to buy bread.
"The worst time is early in the morning, before people go to work,
and on the eve of the weekend," said a man who identified himself as
Ibrahim.
Bakers admit Syria is facing a bread crisis and that they are struggling to meet demand.
"We are now producing 3,000 tons of bread per day. Normally [before
the conflict] we produce 2,142 tons," Osman Hamed, head of a
government-owned bakery, was quoted as saying by the official SANA news
agency.
Shamssedin al-Khatib, a banker from the southern province of Daraa,
where a popular uprising against the regime erupted last March, says
Syria is facing "a bread crisis."
He blames it on the cost of flour which jumped 200 percent in the
past year, and a lack of manpower as bakers are stuck at home due to the
violence and the presence of military checkpoints everywhere.
Syrians, like most Arabs, relish their "khobz", a flat, pitta-type
bread made of slightly leavened wheat flour and baked in brick ovens or
electric ones that puff and form a pocket when cooled.
A kilo and a half of the popular bread costs 15 Syrian pounds (20 US cents).
But more well-off Syrians who are coping with inflation prefer a more
refined bread, which costs twice as much at bakeries where customers
need not stand in line.
Khalil is not one of them and complains that the cost of everything has gone up, including electricity, gas, public transport.
"This has changed a lot. The situation is bad. I can no longer meet my family's needs," he said.
"Even the tabbouleh is now a dish we make only for special
occasions," he said of the everyman Arab's traditional salad which is
made of bulghur, chopped tomatoes, onions and parsley, drizzled in olive
oil and lemon.
Earlier this month the UN food agency warned that civil unrest is
increasing the risk of hunger for 1.4 million people in Syria, which
must raise cereal imports by a third to offset a loss in output.
Syria, which relies on food imports for almost half of its domestic
use, should import around 4.0 million tons of wheat for food use and
maize and barley for feed -- about 1 million tons more than the previous
year.
-AFP/NOW Lebanon
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