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Decaying
nation
Scott Johnson, Newsweek
September 28, 2007
http://mobile.newsweek.com/BETTER/detail.jsp?key=12427&rc=top&p=1&pv=1
Contrary to
popular belief, Zimbabwe was never really the breadbasket of Africa.
But at least it could feed itself and have plenty left over. Those
days are gone now-the southern African nation is, quite literally,
starving. Food store shelves are bare. The wealthiest Zimbabweans
now fly abroad to neighboring countries to shop for basic supplies
like bread, cooking oil, sugar and meat. The South African grocery
chain Pick 'n Pay is taking direct bulk orders by phone and delivering
the goods by air freight to the cities of Harare or Bulawayo. Electricity
service is down to 12 hours a day, more or less the same levels
found in Iraq. Clean water is so scarce that the poorest Zimbabweans
have resorted to pumping water by hand from remote wells. "People
are pumping at midnight, all hours of the day," says Eddy Cross,
a businessman and member of the Zimbabwean opposition group Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC). Recently Cross ran into a young girl
in Bulawayo. "All I do all day is hunting and scavenging,"
she told him.
Just when it
seemed it couldn't get any worse in Zimbabwe, it has. Officially,
the inflation rate is more than 6,000 percent, but realistically
the figure is probably closer to three times that. The U.S dollar
is trading for 600,000 to one on the black market, virtually the
only place left to do business in the country these days. Last week,
the country's biggest food distributor, National Foods, offered
retrenchment packages to 5,000 employees. Edgars, a large regional
retail clothing chain, closed 19 Zimbabwean stores in the last month
alone. Zimbabwe's Chamber of Commerce recently announced that more
than 400,000 jobs were in jeopardy. Everyone from cattle companies
to detergent manufacturers are closing shop and leaving. Analysts
forecast a possible 100,000 percent inflation rate by the end of
the year. Ever since President Robert Mugabe started enforcing a
series of drastic price-control measures last month to artificially
keep his imploding economy in check, the country's downward spiral
has accelerated drastically. The steady stream of economic refugees
recently increased precipitously to several hundred thousand a week-the
vast majority of them hungry and poor and destined for squatter
camps in South Africa and Botswana.
nside Zimbabwe,
the privations have taken on a sort of sad, Fellini-esque absurdity.
Consider this recent Associated Press headline: HUNGRY ZIMBABWEANS
TRY TO EAT GIRAFFE. The giraffe had wandered to the outskirts of
Harare from a nearby farm. Malnourished locals swarmed upon the
animal, eager to chop it up for "the pot."
And yet, even as the economy sinks into a state of near total inertia,
there are increasing signs that significant political change is
underway in Zimbabwe. For the first time Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF
party appears to be making significant compromises with negotiators
from the opposition. If the changes are successful they could lead
to a revamping of the Constitution, a redrafting of a series of
repressive laws and new elections, which could bring about the end
of Mugabe's 27-year grip on power. Negotiators from both sides are
hammering out the language for a series of compromises in five key
areas of government and social policy. And for the first time, both
sides are discussing more sensitive issues of political violence
as well as the government's tactic of using food as a weapon to
squash opposition activity.
The changes
have already started to appear. Last week, the government stripped
nearly three-dozen non-elected ZANU-PF parliamentarians of their
seats in the legislature. And government negotiators have also agreed
in principle to amend parts of the Constitution to include many
of the opposition's demands. "We can say without any doubt
that significant concessions have been made by the government,"
says one source familiar with the ongoing discussions, who asked
not be identified because of their sensitive nature. "There's
a growing realization that the ground rules are changing."
There's still
a long way to go. The economic implosion and the accompanying social
decay has been so drastic that many observers fear Zimbabwe won't
be ready for elections, currently scheduled for March. Teams are
now discussing the possibility of delaying the ballot until June.
Meanwhile, opposition leaders from both sides are urgently pushing
to draft new legislation to ensure, among other things, that an
independent electoral commission is up and running before people
go to the polls. "We have to stabilize the situation in the
country-the food situation, the economic situation-before people
can be asked to vote," says one insider. "We have to get
the media back in, we have to get the daily news back out on the
streets." It may still be too early to say the negotiations
will succeed. In the past, Mugabe has used occasions like these
to stall for time. And critics are justifiably fearful that recent
government concessions are nothing more than a ruse to trick and
further divide the already splintered opposition.
Yet it's also
clear that Mugabe has been under fire not only from his critics
in the West but also increasingly from his neighbors, as well. It's
estimated that Zimbabwe's economic woes are costing South Africa
up to $5 billion a year. Botswana, which hosts more than 250,000
Zimbabwean refugees, is straining under the pressure and has begun
to point fingers at Zimbabweans for rising crime rates there. Faced
with these realities, a new generation of African leaders has begun
to push back against the one-time African independence hero. But
a sense of cautious optimism has crept into the ranks of the opposition.
"I think we have reached an irreversible situation," says
another opposition figure with close knowledge of the progress of
the talks. "But it still has to be honored, and we're dealing
with a very, very desperate regime."
So where does
Mugabe fit into all of this? At first glance, the 83-year-old autocrat
doesn't appear to have lost any of his swagger. Earlier this month,
Mugabe allegedly threatened to withdraw from the regional alliance
known as the Southern African Development Community (SADC)-a move
that would have been tantamount to political and economic suicide.
"It's like saying stop the world, I want to get off,"
quipped one Zimbabwean with knowledge of the threat, "There's
no possibility of that, he's stuck." Another option being quietly
discussed among the continent's leaders is Mugabe's eventual "retirement."
In this scenario, Mugabe would appoint someone to take his place
as the ZANU-PF candidate next spring or summer and he would quietly
withdraw, possibly with some assurances of immunity, or at least
protection within Zimbabwe's borders. Ironically, Mugabe's departure
could also make a bad situation worse. ZANU-PF is a divided party,
and without a strong figure at the helm, the divisions within its
ranks could become too big for anyone to handle.
For now, the
big question remains how much longer can the country founder before
it finally sinks into total anarchy? For ordinary Zimbabweans, life
has become a nightmare. A bus fare from Bulawayo to Harare is 2
million Zim dollars-an impossibly high figure in a country that
in many parts has moved onto the barter system. Fuel has virtually
disappeared. Last month, 3,200 teachers left their jobs. Medical
facilities are running out of drugs, cleaning materials and linen.
The country's nearly 2 million HIV-positive people are unable to
maintain high-protein diets. In some places, people are dying of
hunger.
At a small South
African town called Messina, near the Zimbabwean border, a group
that describes itself as an underground pro-democracy movement put
up a roadside billboard with a message for arriving immigrants.
WE KNOW WHY YOU'RE IN SOUTH AFRICA, it reads, LIFE IN ZIMBABWE IS
MURDER THESE DAYS.
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