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Lunch
with a dissident minister
Christina Lamb, The Sunday Times (UK)
July 08, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article2042130.ece
It was 10 minutes
after the time arranged for lunch with one of President Robert Mugabe's
ministers and I had no idea whether the next person through the
door would be him or someone from the Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO), Zimbabwe's feared secret police. Not only was I working
without a permit - punishable with two years in jail -
but I had also once been denounced by Mugabe's spokesman as
an "enemy of the state" for my reporting. The meeting
was a risk for the minister, too. But our go-between said he wanted
the world to know that some in the regime were unhappy. It had to
be a trap, I thought. Then the minister walked in. "I've
been reading your book [about Zimbabwe]," he said, "and
the CIO are outside." Then he laughed. It was not funny. Mugabe's
prisons are filthy, overcrowded and rife with tuberculosis and Aids.
We looked at the menus.
Entrées started at Z$700,000 - two weeks' wages
for most Zimbabwean people. "Prices are crazy," I said.
"Yes, we need to knock off some more zeros," he replied.
"It's because of our own policies. If this were a company
and Mugabe was chief executive, he would have been fired long ago."
I told him I had met many Zimbabwean professionals whose salaries
were less than the bus fares to work. Surely the situation was not
sustainable? "The question is, will we wake one morning to
the need to change or stay blind and let change be forced upon us?"
he replied. "We know we will be the first victims of any forced
change. What's keeping us going is remittances from Zimbabweans
who left the country. Without those, 50% of the people who are struggling
to survive at the moment would die."
However, when I asked
whether he or other ministers spoke out in cabinet against Mugabe,
he laughed again. "You outside are very naive. You have to
realise that both the cabinet and the politburo [the supreme policy-making
body of the ruling Zanu PF party] all centre round one figure: Robert
Mugabe. Look where the cabinet came from - 80% or 90% were
nobodies before. They've made everything because of him, got
rich, got farms . . . They don't consider this a failure -
to them it's an incredible success." The Zimbabwean newspapers
were full of reports of a foiled coup attempt so I asked about threats
from the military. "Look, if it was real it wouldn't
be all over the paper," he replied. "I wouldn't
be surprised if those officers said to be involved suddenly disappear."
As the bill came, totalling almost Z$4m (£10,000 according
to the official rate, about £5.80 at the market rate), we
returned to the economy. "It's like a dam with the wall
about to crash in on us," he said. "If we don't
create diversionary channels. the wall will come crashing in and
wash us all away. That's enough, I think," he added,
consulting his Rolex and pulling out several large bricks of bank
notes. Two days later I heard that the general supposedly behind
the coup had died mysteriously when his car hit a goods train.
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