Food bank, charities busy in Algarve as pandemic ravages Portugal
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[April 02, 2021]
By Catarina Demony
FARO, Portugal (Reuters) - Carla Lacerda
used to earn a good salary selling duty-free goods to holidaymakers
arriving at Algarve airport in southern Portugal, but she lost her job
last August due to the COVID-19 pandemic and quickly ran out of cash to
feed her two kids.
The 40-year-old now receives around 500 euros ($587) per month in
unemployment benefits, leaving her no option but to join the queue for
food donations.
"I never thought I'd be in this situation," Lacerda said as she waited
for milk, vegetables and other essential goods at the Refood charity in
Faro, capital of the Algarve. "It's sad I've reached this point, but I'm
not ashamed."
Lacerda is one of thousands of people whose lives have been turned
upside down by the pandemic, which has ravaged tourism across the
sun-drenched Algarve region and left its popular beaches and golf
resorts largely deserted.
Algarve's food bank, which has two warehouses in the region, is now
helping 29,000 people, almost double the number before the pandemic.
"It's the first time since the food bank began in Algarve that the
numbers have reached such a level," said its president, Nuno Alves, as
volunteers distributed food to drivers from various charities waiting in
their cars outside.
Poverty is spreading across the middle class, said Alves, with people
from the crucial tourism sector worst affected. Many businesses have had
to shut and some may never reopen.
In February, the number of those registered as jobless in the Algarve
jumped 74% from a year ago, more than in any other Portuguese region.
'GOING HUNGRY'
At the Faro branch of Refood, which collects unwanted food from
restaurants and supermakets and distributes it to the needy, 172
families queue for supplies every week, an increase of some 160% since
the pandemic started.
"We help an architect, a teacher, a nurse, a social worker," said
coordinator Paula Matias. "It's very sad. I'm a mother and I cannot
imagine what it's like not to have a plate of food to give to your
children."
One man in his thirties who requested anonymity told Reuters he had lost
his job as a personal fitness trainer to wealthy expats because of the
COVID-19 pandemic, which also claimed the lives of his brother and
nephew.
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People load a truck with goods collected at the Faro Food Bank
Against Hunger, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic
in Faro, Portugal, March 30, 2021. Picture taken March 30, 2021.
REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
He sold everything he had, from his flashy car to a fish tank, to
pay the bills, but in January he had to ask for help from community
organisation MAPS, which now gives him food, and also psychological
support after he tried to take his own life.
"I tried to be strong but I couldn't," he said. "Government support
never arrived and I couldn't get out of the situation."
MAPS vice-president Elsa Cardoso said pleas for help continued to
rise and that some people who had worked in tourism jobs were now
homeless.
"Every day there are more people no longer able to support
themselves, who have been evicted," Cardoso said, adding that it
might take a while for things to improve.
Portugal has been under a second strict lockdown since January that
is only now gradually being eased.
British retiree Denise Dahl said distributing food to the vulnerable
through her own organisation 'East Algarve Families in Need' had
helped her through the grieving process after she lost her husband
Terje to COVID-19 in December.
"If I didn't have this I don't know what would've happened," said
Dahl, who lives in the town of Tavira, adding that the situation in
the Algarve continued to worsen.
"With the lack of tourists coming in this year we expect even more
families going hungry."
($1 = 0.8522 euros)
(Reporting by Catarina Demony; Additional reporting by Miguel
Pereira and Pedro Nunes; Editing by Andrei Khalip and Gareth Jones)
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