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Zimbabwe on the brink of total collapse
Peta
Thornycroft, The Telegraph (UK)
February 10, 2007
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/
The collapse of
Zimbabwe's economy has finally taken its toll on President Robert
Mugabe's regime. It is facing a disintegrating army and police,
a wave of strikes, power black-outs and the breakdown of every essential
service.
With inflation
running at 1,281 per cent – the highest rate in the world — Mr Mugabe
finds himself locked in a vicious circle.
It takes only
a few weeks for the value of every pay rise given to civil servants
to be wiped out. But the bankrupt regime can only cover the cost
of further wage rises by printing money – which fuels inflation
still further and creates pressure for yet more pay increases.
Tension on the
streets of the capital, Harare, was mounting yesterday as people
scavenged to earn extra money for food and transport. Some of those
fortunate enough to have jobs cannot even afford bus fares.
In what was once
one of Africa's most prosperous economies, a 35-year-old primary
school teacher with six years' service earns £13 a month.
The woman, who
wished to remain anonymous, said: "My take-home pay is not enough
for transport to work, so I am not going to school this week."
She is not on
strike, although many of the 110,000 state teachers started a "go
slow" this week and are absent from classrooms. This has left parents
to fill in as home-teachers.
Zimbabwe's four
largest hospitals are crippled by a seven-week strike among junior
doctors, who earn only £6 a month after deductions. All civil servants
received a 300 per cent pay rise in January – but inflation has
already eroded this gain.
Cholera has broken
out in Harare because the water treatment plants are collapsing.
Power black-outs are increasing and one town, Chitungwiza, gets
only four days of electricity a week.
Mr Mugabe responded
by saying that any protests "will not be tolerated".
But he relies
on the army and police to suppress challenges. Sources in the army
say that soldiers – while far better paid than teachers or nurses
– are still enduring "desperate" conditions. Most of those below
the rank of colonel earn less than $1 [51p] per day – the international
measure for absolute poverty.
"There is plenty
of indiscipline because we are hungry," said one captain.
Mr Mugabe's elite
Presidential Guard, which has extra perks and higher salaries, is
also disgruntled, according to the military source.
But the economic
collapse has created opportunities for the corrupt elite around
Mr Mugabe, who have already benefited from the seizure of white-owned
farms.
Senior figures
in the ruling Zanu-PF party can buy US dollars from the Reserve
Bank at the meaningless official exchange rate – and then sell them
on the parallel market at a 2,000 per cent profit. They can buy
fuel from the state at one twelfth of the market price. This gives
a powerful core of Zanu-PF figures a vested interest in keeping
Mr Mugabe in power.
The president,
who turns 83 later this month, gambles that by keeping this wealthy
handful happy, he can survive the economic collapse and extend his
27-year rule.
Splits in the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change have made Mr Mugabe's
task easier. But continuing this balancing act indefinitely may
not be possible, especially if discontent spreads in the vitally
important army and police force.
"I have never
seen a crisis of this depth before," said John Robertson, an independent
economist in Harare. "There seems to be no solution in sight." Daniel
Ndlela, another economist, said: "This is an unsaveable situation.
It is by far the worst since independence.
"It will collapse,
as the government will talk a lot but it won't change its ways.
When and how this collapse will happen, that is the question."
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