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Zimbabwe-s
first 30 years - A generation of failure
Sapa-dpa
April 15, 2010
http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/africa/features/article_1548450.php/Zimbabwe-s-first-30-years-a-generation-of-failure-News-Feature
30th anniversary of independence
is Sunday, April 18
They call them the "born-frees,"
the generation of Zimbabweans born after the day 30 years ago when
the former British colony of Zimbabwe (formerly Southern Rhodesia)
was declared an independent nation after ninety years of white minority
rule.
The dream had arrived
where they were free to vote and choose their own leaders, to determine
their own future. With that came the right to receive a good education,
health care, and housing, and to work and earn a decent living,
instead of being consigned to life as second-class citizens because
of their skin colour.
Thirty years down the
line, the reality is rather different. The generation born in hope
still finds itself oppressed and driven into poverty and deprivation.
"We are not free,"
said Billy Makamwe, who was born a month after independence. "If
you talk politics on a bus there will be someone listening, and
when you want to get off, they will arrest you. We live in fear."
In the same time, President
Robert Mugabe has turned from a middle-aged Marxist, who invested
heavily in education and healthcare, to an 86-year-old despot showing
no sign of being ready to retire gracefully, despite having been
forced into a coalition government with his sworn enemy, pro-democracy
leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
What was Africa's
second-most developed economy, after South Africa, is struggling
to recover from spectacular economic collapse in 2008 that saw inflation
hit 500 billion percent and the currency, at independence on par
with British sterling - plunge to a rate of 4 trillion Zimbabwean
dollars to 1 US dollar.
Makamwe grew up in the
shantytown of Epworth south of the capital of Harare. "When
I was at primary school, things were normal," he said. "My
father was able to give us money, we ate good food, three meals
a day."
But by the time he left
school after four years of high school, life was tough. Money was
short and two meals a day had become a luxury.
His ambitions were modest
enough. He wanted to become a driver. But by the mid-90s, the economy
under Mugabe's control was contracting sharply. The best he could
find was a succession of manual labour jobs and finally a job as
a security guard.
At the same
time, the first glimmerings of political opposition to Mugabe's
rule were beginning to show, and were met with fierce resistance
by his ruling Zanu-PF party.
"Now there were
Zanu-PF youths on the streets, forcing people to come to meetings,
threatening us."
"We don't want this,"
he said. "When we were born, the war was over. Mugabe had been
fighting the whites, and then we got a black government.
"But the war is
going on," he continued. "These youths are singing "hondo,
hondo" (Shona for 'war, war') all the time.
"Mugabe is making
war against the people. We don't understand what war is for. That
is old politics."
By 2008, Zanu-PF had
unleashed an offensive to destroy Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change.
In Epworth, it took the
form of dragging MDC supporters out of their homes for public "punishment"
beatings.
When they came for Makamwe
at 1 a.m. one night, he managed to slip out through a back window
and hid in a large avocado tree. The next day he moved his family
out of the area.
Many thousands had the
same fate, but Makamwe was lucky - he escaped and found a job as
a gardener.
Independence Day in Zimbabwe
is usually celebrated by a rally of Zanu-PF faithful in a stadium,
a military display and a speech by Mugabe, in which he usually tilts
at the West.
Makamwe says he won't
be participating. His main concern, he says, is for the next generation,
and a good education for his daughter, Annie.
"I want her to be
able to grow up to be a teacher, a doctor, even a pilot," he
said.
"But that can never
be while Mugabe is there. We are not independent, we are dependent
on all those Western countries that Mugabe hates. He made it like
that. We have to have change."
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