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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Inexplicably,
a feeling of change stirs in Zimbabwe
Jan Raath,
The Times (UK)
March 07, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article1480207.ece
The closest it comes
to is the feeling I get around the start of every spring. Something
odd in the air, a tightening of the wind, an unusual sharpness in
the light, that sets a stirring inside me.
A new flush, a zing,
a glow, an idea, I don't know what, came in late January.
It wasn't the weather. I can't pinpoint the day it settled
on me. It took a couple of weeks to begin to articulate it. It was
more the changing of the colour of litmus paper than a flash. Suddenly,
I found other people fervently agreeing with me, and startled also
that I should be feeling the same thing. That this year there is
going to be change.
If you had said that
to me in late December, I would have said, forget it, Robert Mugabe,
just 83, will be bestriding Zimbabwe well into his nineties. Since
2000, when he began to hammer the life out of the first genuine,
popular democratic movement in this country, despair has eaten into
almost everyone.
But there is that thing
in the air. It's not just journalists, academics, lawyers
and human rights activists unsettled by it. The youths in Epworth
township south of the city who shout abuse at policemen ? provocative
behaviour unheard of till now ? have been fired by it. The same
sense moved the man arrested at a police roadblock at Hot Springs
in the southeast for having a banknote with the words scribbled
on it in Shona: "For Satan so loved Zimbabwe, he gave his
only begotten son, Mugabe, that whoever follows him shall have everlasting
poverty." And the women demonstrators late last month who
picked up teargas canisters fired at them by riot police, and hurled
them back.
This flickering that
shows itself in anger, boldness and hope has not had anything to
do with a welling up of opposition political momentum, as there
was in 2000 when the opposition Movement for Democratic Change had
to be beaten and cheated out of election victory. The MDC has been
split for almost two years and the separate factions are virtually
dormant. The restiveness has grown by itself, spontaneously.
I can't pinpoint
why it should have suddenly begun to stir now, or at all. The incremental
pressure of the struggle for survival under 1,600 per cent inflation,
incessant harassment and brutality by Mr Mugabe's many arms
of repression, and the helpless outrage at being trampled on by
a small class of ultra-rich venal parasites has to be at its heart.
But the same motives have been there in other African tyrannies
for decades, without producing a twitch of unrest.
Zimbabwe has passed an
indefinable tipping point. It is an elusive, completely unpredictable
and fragile phenomenon; Mr Mugabe has already set out to extinguish
it, and he knows no civilised limits.
But it can also be as
terrifyingly infectious and destructive as the ebola virus.
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