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The
abject poverty in a country where everyone is a millionaire
John
Simpson, The Independent (UK)
January 15, 2008
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article3339047.ece
In
Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe, everyone is a millionaire. You have to
be: a loaf of bread costs a million Zimbabwe dollars, a newspaper
costs two million, and a decent joint of beef costs a hundred million.
The only problem is that the average wage is 20 million dollars
a month. They're called Mugabe dollars and it isn't a term of affection.
Everyone queues here: in the supermarkets, at the petrol stations
and in the banks, in order to draw out the money to buy anything.
Inflation is so high that items which cost a mere 20 million dollars
yesterday are likely to cost double that by tomorrow. For some reason,
the government refuses to print million-dollar notes; perhaps it
thinks it would look bad. The highest note is for 750,000 dollars,
and doing the maths is horrendous.
It's
extraordinarily difficult to find anyone here who supports President
Mugabe. He is loathed in the Harare slums. In Mbare, where two years
ago his thugs bulldozed the shanties housing thousands of opposition
supporters, small children shouted anti-Mugabe slogans as we drove
past. Shopkeepers, domestic workers, hospital staff, Aids patients,
people selling handicrafts in the street - they all hate him.
A very senior Zanu PF figure, a man who sees himself as a king-maker,
met me clandestinely in Harare. He hated Mugabe more than any of
the others. I am in Zimbabwe undercover, together with two colleagues.
The BBC is banned, so it felt particularly good to broadcast live
from here for last night's Ten O'Clock News. It's the first time
any British television news organisation has broadcast from Zimbabwe
since Mugabe refused to let foreign journalists come here.
The
biggest problem is that BBC World, our international television
news channel, has a big following here, especially among the political
elite. There's a real danger of being recognised and arrested. Back
in London a make-up artist fitted me out with a beard, to make me
look like an Afrikaans farmer. But it had a habit of coming loose
in the heat and, if we were caught, it seemed unwise to wear a disguise.
So I've just worn a baseball cap to cover my untidy white hair.
I look pretty awful, but not as bad as I looked in the beard. The
disguise has worked pretty well. We have been in Harare for a week,
and have spent a lot of time driving and walking round the city,
the suburbs and the slums. Recording what is known in the trade
as a "piece to camera", walking down a main street in
Harare apparently talking to myself, was the tensest moment. I had
to do it a couple of times, regardless of the onlookers and the
police stooges.
So
far I have been recognised three times. Once was in an expensive
restaurant, where we were filming how the Mugabe elite live. Our
own meal came to 290 million dollars; I left a 10 million dollar
tip (about £2.50). Once was by a senior opposition figure
whom I wanted to interview anyway, since he had recently been tortured
by Mugabe's secret police. And once was in a shop where I wanted
to find a pair of Zimbabwe's famous Courtenay boots. Yet unpleasant
though Mugabe's Zimbabwe is politically, it isn't Idi Amin's Uganda.
There is still a certain degree of personal freedom here. People
can be tortured for their political beliefs but it's rare for anyone
to be killed. The murders of white farmers eight years ago have
not been repeated. But there are spies everywhere. One attached
himself to the BBC's cameraman Nigel Bateson as he finished some
clandestine filming in an empty supermarket.
"I
would so much like to be your friend," the stooge said. "Won't
you give me your name and phone number?" "I couldn't do
a thing like that," Nigel replied, "I hardly know you."
And because Mugabe is so unpopular, it has been easy for us to find
people to shelter us and help us. For them, I suspect, it's a quiet
act of resistance. The BBC has called me on three different occasions
to warn me of rumours that we were in Harare. Each time the three
of us discussed the possibility that we might be caught and sent
to a Zimbabwean prison. Each time we agreed to stay on and finish
the job. That job is almost finished now. We have established that
there is a major split within the ruling Zanu PF party, and that
a former finance minister, Simba Makoni, is being put forward by
a powerful grouping as a candidate to challenge Mr Mugabe for the
presidency. The high-level Zanu PF figure who briefed us in secret
was certain that 2008 was likely to be the year Mugabe's hold on
power was either weakened or ended.
But
he won't be brought down by a popular revolution. A combination
of a new and tougher approach by South Africa, the worsening economy
and a palace coup may do the job. But Mugabe is clever and resourceful.
Even now, it is too soon to write his political obituary. As for
us, we will be crossing the Zimbabwean border about the time this
article appears. After so many years of being banned, it's been
a real pleasure, if slightly nerve-racking, to spend a week here
again. This is a magnificent country. It just deserves to be governed
better.
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