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Zimbabwe
residents lack inspiring opposition leader, says archbishop
Bronwen Dachs,
Catholic News Service (CNS)
June 12, 2006
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0603368.htm
CAPE TOWN, South
Africa (CNS) -- Without a strong leader, residents of Zimbabwe will
not risk taking to the streets to protest chronic food shortages
and spiraling poverty, said Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo.
"It is hopeless: There is no one to inspire confidence," Archbishop
Ncube said in a telephone interview from Bulawayo. He said Morgan
Tsvangirai, who leads the opposition Movement for Democratic Change,
"is big talk but has no vision."
President Robert Mugabe, who has led the southern African country
since its independence from Britain in 1980, "is the only leader
people know," Archbishop Ncube said in early June. Most Zimbabweans
"have been intimidated into silence" by the government, and "many
have left to make a living in other countries," he said.
Zimbabwe, which has an unemployment rate of more than 70 percent,
is chronically short of food as well as foreign currency to import
essential commodities, including drugs and fuel.
The country's inflation rate is the highest in the world at more
than 1,000 percent and, according to the World Bank, it has the
fastest-shrinking economy outside a war zone.
Only a few hundred people took part in a protest march in Bulawayo
in late May after a court overturned a government ban, Jesuit Father
Nigel Johnson said in a telephone interview from Bulawayo.
The march, led by a group of church organizations called the Zimbabwe
Christian Alliance, marked the first anniversary of Operation Restore
Order, a government campaign that had riot police demolishing homes
and vendors' stalls in shantytowns around major cities.
Fear was the main reason for the low turnout at the march, Father
Johnson said.
"People are frightened of being arrested and spending at least one
night in a jail that is crowded and dirty," he said.
Security forces intimidate government critics, he said, noting that
riot police "don't hesitate to fire tear gas" at protesters and
"the army would be called in if that wasn't enough" to make a crowd
disperse.
People have vivid memories of the nationwide food riots in 1998,
in which eight people were killed and more than 2,000 people were
arrested and detained on looting charges, he said.
While church-led marches such as the one in Bulawayo are vital in
giving a "voice to the voiceless," not all church-organized gatherings
can be relied on to do the same, Archbishop Ncube said, noting that
some of these events run the risk of being "turned into a platform
for government propaganda."
Mugabe is often given a chance to talk at church-organized gatherings,
and Zimbabwe Council of Churches President Peter Nemapare "is notorious
for backing Mugabe," said Archbishop Ncube.
Many Zimbabweans are destitute, with the prices of food and other
essentials "rising every day," Archbishop Ncube said.
In May the country's Reserve Bank introduced a 100,000-Zimbabwe-dollar
note, worth less than $1 in American currency, because shoppers
had been forced to carry huge stacks of currency into grocery stores.
Noting that "starvation is a gradual thing," Father Johnson said
that Zimbabweans are "getting thinner," and starvation "obviously
makes people more susceptible to disease."
There is one doctor to every 15,000 Zimbabweans, and hospitals have
few or no medicines, Archbishop Ncube said.
"People see no future here for themselves and their families, and
those with a profession just leave," he said.
Those who remain have a "passive acceptance" of their increasing
struggle to make ends meet, Father Johnson said.
Also, "their struggle in trying to work out ways of buying goods
takes up all their time and physical strength," which means they
have no energy for organizing or joining resistance movements, he
said.
Zimbabweans have "an acute sense of being alone in their struggle
and of disappointment in South Africa" for its reluctance to put
pressure on Mugabe to reform, he said.
Some of the estimated 700,000 people who lost their homes and livelihood
in last year's Operation Restore Order have returned to rebuild
the shantytowns in cities around the country, Archbishop Ncube said.
"Many had been there for 30 years or more and have nowhere else
to go," he said.
"The few hundred houses that have been built by the government to
replace those torn down have been given to soldiers and civil servants,"
the archbishop said, noting that none of those affected by the operation
have benefited.
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