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I-m
docile, like you
Rejoice
Ngwenya
January 26, 2012
While in Botswana
last Christmas, I meticulously explained to my cynical uncle why
we Zimbabweans, for thirty-two years, have tolerated President Robert
Mugabe-s unrelenting dictatorship. I noted if Mahatma Gandhi
was a proponent of passive resistance, then Zimbabweans take the
honours in 'passive resilience-! We carry this strain
of lethargic, unquestioning docility - a compelling attachment
to mediocrity. Consider the retinue of pathetic service delivery
at all levels - supermarkets skimming us of change, traffic
police molesting us for the flimsiest of all reasons at numerous
roadblocks, municipalities that 'treat- us to sewage
bursts and dry taps. We are tossed like ping-pong balls at passport
offices, detained for hours on end at fidgety Beitbridge Border
Post while ZESA - the public electricity authority utility
- switches of power at will. Like the biblical lamb at the
proverbial altar of sacrifice, Zimbabweans are tender, forgiving,
silent, apologetic, subservient and submissive. We are the epitome,
a caricature of the 'Jesus Man- who willingly gives
the other cheek. Hey, Mr. Mugabe can snooze all he wants. No midnight
shadows will show up under his door!
Now that information
is a 'human right-, I have long mourned of poor internet
and telephonic connectivity from local ISPs ECONET, Telecel and
NetOne. Scream all you want, Rejoice; they wouldn-t be bothered,
really. Imagine a five-star hotel in New York with a dysfunctional
Wi-Fi service? It would be virtually closed! What we lack, as Zimbabweans
is an aggressive service boycott culture. We could connive and ignore
these pretenders to the technological throne for only 24 hours,
but just like the rest of you, thirty years of oppression have conditioned
me to be pathetically lethargic. Bad service is now such a . . .
privilege that we even look forward to!
Every modern-day professional
worth their salt must dread living, even for an hour, in a place
devoid of connectivity. We surely deserve better. Elsewhere in 'civilised-
Africa, technology has moved on. It only seems like yesterday that
lawyers, judges and PR practitioners were proud owners of Olivetti
typewriters and telex machines! Psychedelic coloured receivers on
oak 'telephone tables- and sleek black 'VHS-
video players adorning 'room dividers- were the epitome
of finesse! Today, I feel Zimbabwe-s internet and telephony
is a relic of those 'swinging- 1980s. While the rest
of 'civilised- Africa has leapt ahead, our local version
of the Three Musketeers - ECONET, Telecel and NetOne - all shiny
masts and no bandwidth - propagate a plethora of empty promises.
For example, I received
an SMS reminder from NetOne, that 'your account is less than
US$0.06- yet a mere thirty minutes earlier at 8:00am, I had
'hashed- several units of USD$5 'airtime-,
immediately getting an acknowledgement of USD$4.89 credit. For two
days, the other ISP provider ECONET laboured to get my SMS platform
functional. I am currently doing some work from a tenth floor hotel
room in the centre of Harare, but cannot sustain a decent minute-long
cell phone conversation without feeling like am calling from Saint
John-s windswept biblical Patmos Island! Hounded by technological
misfortune, my 'new- ECOWEB-supplied hotel Wi-Fi network
struggles to respond despite numerous attempts at passwords.
South Africans and Nigerians
would not tolerate this sort of inept arrogance from service providers.
No doubt ECONET, Telecel, NetOne and supermarket chain executives
- in the insulated comfort of their ivory towers - have convinced
themselves that no single customer will rock their 'Titanics-.
Perhaps they are right. After all, I may groan and mourn but am
lethargically docile, just like you.
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