godfrey mwenda introduces us to juma athumani and his wife alia. now that juma is out of work, they often can't even afford rice. alia says today all they have is tea. >> she said that the situation is more or less the same. the condition, the financial position of the family was relatively poor. >> when there's no food, juma, alia and their two children make do with tea. that's happening more and more often these days. >> i've lost hope in the future. right now i don't even have money to feed my family. >> back at the "mitumba" market in dar es salaam. these seamstresses used to work for the textile industry. now they take in the pants of well-fed europeans to fit the locals. they work long hours and earn less than 80 euros a month. >> they're using raw material from mitumba. instead of using tanzanian material. this is due to the collapse of the textile industry. >> the rise of the low-cost fashion industry in europe brought a glut of discarded clothing. much of it ends up in markets like these. you see these small children's clothes here. most li