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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
The
grind goes on
IRIN
News
July 02, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79061
Chamunorwa Shamhu* works
for one of the few non-governmental organisations (NGOs) still allowed
to operate in Zimbabwe, but by mid-afternoon this week had still
not managed to write the five paragraphs needed for a funding proposal.
His boss said he had
noticed other staff had "switched off" when they came
to work on 30 June, the day after the announcement that President
Robert Mugabe had won the uncontested second-round presidential
run-off election.
"This is no joke
- people have been operating like zombies," he told IRIN. "People
are listless, dejected, have no interest in their work and there
are now very few smiles and laughter at the work place."
"Dejected"
perhaps fails to convey the strength of Shamhu's feelings. When
Mugabe lost the first round of the presidential race to opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai on 29 March, he said he had dared to hope
that change could finally come to Zimbabwe after eight straight
years of recession and increasing political repression.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) had won a majority in parliament, and
Tsvangirai almost scored an overwhelming majority in the presidential
vote, which would have given him a first-round victory against Mugabe,
84, who has ruled since independence in 1980.
"At the time I was
ready to skip the country and go to South Africa, Botswana, Mozambique
or Zambia, but when the government lost the election my hopes were
revived that a better Zimbabwe, with jobs and a normal life, was
about to return."
Instead, Tsvangirai
pulled out of
the 27 June run-off, citing the political violence that had driven
thousands from their homes, had injured hundreds, and claimed the
lives of over 80 MDC officials and supporters since March.
Rather than the financial
aid and goodwill that was likely to have greeted a new government,
Mugabe's swearing-in as president and apparent determination to
ignore international condemnation of the ballot has left Zimbabweans
to struggle along with daily shortages of the most basic household
needs, and an inflation rate that could be as high as 10 million
percent.
"To put it simply,
I earn Z$300 billion a month. The bank only allows a maximum withdrawal
of Z$25 billion a day. Bus fare for one person to town is Z$10 billion,
which means I spend $20 billion per day on transport," Shamhu
said. Today's exchange rate is roughly Z$30 billion to US$1.
"A decent meal in
lunch-break costs Z$25 billion, and it also means I have to spend
four hours in a queue every day. At home my wife and I do not have
maize-meal [the staple food], sugar, milk, soap, electricity and
water. I have had to park my car because fuel is not available.
With the prospects of another five years under Mugabe, how can you
expect anybody to look forward to the following day?"
Psychologist Paddington
Japajapa said people appeared to have symptoms akin to post-traumatic
stress disorder - a condition associated with horrific experiences.
"The condition manifests itself through profound sadness, fear,
depression, apprehension, failure to concentrate, failure to participate
in usual activities."
Sharon Dube*, who has
two children and is a junior executive at an advertising agency,
said she does not know how she has managed to keep going; things
have been so bleak in recent years. "My children are growing
up and they need to eat, but my earnings are not able to sustain
them. I have all along led a pretty decent life but as things stand,
if the hardships continue, the only option left to me would be prostitution."
The gloom that descended
has not been conducive to the work of an advertising agency, she
told IRIN. "Coming up with advertising ideas or concepts requires
a lot of creativity and concentration, and the entire department
has not done well so far this week because of anxieties connected
to our future and the possibilities of more hardships."
* Not their
real names
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