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Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Sinking
into the past: a desperate nation living on the scrap heap
Xan
Rice and Jan Raath, Times (UK)
December
03, 2005
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=13327
The ruination
of Zimbabwe seems to have broken the spirit of its people
IN CHITUNGWIZA,
a dormitory town home to more than one million black Zimbabweans,
a breeze is a curse. It shifts the rotting rubbish in front of the
tiny houses. And it laces the air with the stench of human waste,
which drifts in thin dark rivers in the streets. "We are sitting
on a time bomb," Misheck Shoko, the Mayor of Chitungwiza, said
as he gestured towards a concrete pipe spewing thick brown effluent
into a stream outside the town’s main sewerage treatment plant.
The stream feeds the Manyame Dam, which supplies the capital, Harare,
with its water. "It’s a miracle there have not been more outbreaks
of disease."
Across Zimbabwe
the scene is the same: townships that were once models for Africa
have become stinking health hazards. The big cities are not much
better. Some parts of Bulawayo have not had water for seven weeks.
Refuse collection in Harare is sporadic. Power failures are routine.
In small towns
such as Bindura and Shamva to the north, rubbish is collected by
ox wagon. Zimbabwe is fast sinking into the past.
The meltdown
of one of the continent’s best infrastructures has been years in
the making, the result of underinvestment and mismanagement. But
the speed of the decline over the past few months has been astonishing.
Zimbabweans long accustomed to hardship cannot remember a worse
time.
It has been
driven by a crippling shortage of foreign currency. Since the seizure
of white-owned commercial farms began in earnest nearly six years
ago, agricultural output — the mainstay of the economy — has dropped
80 per cent. Without dollars the Government cannot buy the £70,000
worth of parts it needs to fix the sewerage plant in Chitungwiza,
where dozens of people have already contracted dysentery. It also
cannot buy fuel.
Service stations
have not had petrol or diesel for months. Fuel can only be bought
on the black market — at more than four times the official pump
price. Air Zimbabwe cancelled all its flights for a day last week
because of a lack of jet fuel.
Prices have
doubled in the past month. Annual inflation reached 411 per cent
in October, according to official numbers. But TM, a supermarket
chain, estimated that it was closer to 700 per cent, based on a
typical shopping basket. The International Monetary Fund predicts
that the economy will decline by 7.2 per cent this year; GDP is
$4.3 billion (£2.5 billion), barely half of what it was seven years
ago. A US dollar now costs Z$61,000 at official rates; Z$85,000
on the black market.
The effects
of the economic crisis are visible everywhere. People queue for
hours just to buy maize meal, sugar and bread, and pay for a trolley-full
of goods with briefcases full of cash. Supermarkets, which change
their prices every week, have started installing note-counting machines
at their tills.
Only 15 of the
country’s 175 railway locomotives are in running order. The state-owned
Zimbabwe United Passenger Company, which runs Harare’s bus services,
is broke with debts of £410,000. Hospitals, receiving an increasing
number of patients suffering from malnutrition, are creaking under
the strain. In a recent parliamentary report Harare Central Hospital
said that it may have to close because so many nurses were leaving
— 30 over the past two weeks — because of poor wages and a lack
of medical equipment. No more Aids patients are being accepted for
treatment because of a shortage of drugs. Thousands of soldiers
have been sent on compulsory leave because there is not enough food
and money.
Across the country
commuters have turned into hitch-hikers. Demand for bicycles has
soared. At Zacks Cycles, opposite the railway station in downtown
Harare, Yossi Tal, the manager, said that he had sold thousands
of heavy, single-speed bicycles this year to companies such as British
American Tobacco. "Considering the situation here, it’s been
a good year," said Mr Tal, one of the few businessmen who can
afford to smile.
The Consumer
Council of Zimbabwe said recently that a typical family of six needed
Z$11.6 million a month to survive. But with wages unable to match
inflation, the 20 per cent of adults with formal jobs usually earn
about Z$3 million a month. Those with access to foreign currency,
or who have relatives abroad, are coping. But many others are not.
"I eat
one meal a day, for lunch," Chamunorwa Makarawu, a resident
of Mabvuku township on Harare’s eastern outskirts, said. "Air
pie for breakfast and supper."
In the rural
areas, which have been badly affected by drought, the suffering
is even more acute. Near Chivi, in the southern Masvingo province,
a bumpy dirt road cut through parched countryside. Cows, their ribs
pressing through skin pulled taut, chew leaves off trees; there
is no grass. Many cattle have perished. Their owners may not be
far behind. "People are not starving yet," said Alfred
Matewe, 39, a short, barefoot man with a grey-flecked beard and
heavily patched trousers. "But they will be if the rains don’t
come soon."
But rain will
not solve the food crisis. A shortage of seed and fertiliser — and
money to buy them — mean next year’s harvest could be one of the
worst. Aid agencies believe that more than three million people
will need feeding by March. The Government, in denial over the scale
of the problem, is reluctant to let food relief in.
The hardship
is tearing at the social fabric of a country where the life expectancy
is now just 37. Everisto, an unemployed man in Mashonaland East
who asked for his surname not to be used, said: "People don’t
communicate anymore. When you try to talk to your neighbour they
say, ‘What do you want? We have our own problems’."
Such as finding
money for school fees. Public boarding schools have said that they
will increase their fees by 500 per cent next year, and parents
organisations have given warning of a new surge of dropouts. Many
children already rush from school to help their unemployed parents
to earn money — something that has become much harder since government
action against illegal trading and dwellings.
The brutal police
operation, known as Operation Murambatsvina (Sweep out the rubbish),
left 700,000 without homes or work. Operation Hlalani Kuhle (Live
well), meant to provide legal homes and formal markets, has barely
begun, and the ban on vending is still being ruthlessly enforced.
Newspaper boys
selling mobile telephone charge cards are frisked and their stock
is confiscated; women selling a few tomatoes and eggs are hauled
off to police stations.
Esnat Marowa,
who tries to make a living as a seamstress in the Mabvuku township,
said: "If they hear your sewing machine going grrrr grrrr in
your house, they come inside and say, ‘What are you doing?’. If
they see a pile of things, they take it." Another resident
said: "When you see police come, you know in their homes they
are hungry."
In the state
media — which now include the Daily Mirror, furtively purchased
with public money by the Central Intelligence Organisation — the
ruling Zanu (PF) party leaks stories of hope: that recent uranium
finds will help to boost the rural electrification programme, that
Zimbabwe can host the 2010 African Nations Cup, that a Stalin-type
command agriculture will help to utilise idle land, that petrol
will arrive "within days". Most ordinary Zimbabweans,
beaten down, despondent and dismayed by the infighting in the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, seem to have accepted their miserable
fate.
The IMF has
refused credit unless urgent economic reform takes place. Donor
countries have long closed their wallets. Even China, to whom President
Mugabe has turned with his Look East policy, has refused to bail
Zimbabwe out. South Africa, which does not want its neighbour to
collapse, will only loan money if there is political reform.
Near Chivhu,
a government stronghold in central Zimbabwe, Nicodimus Joni, 43,
a farmworker in tattered blue overalls and sandals made of old car
tyres, waited for a lift to work. Closing his eyes, and slowly moving
his head from side to side, he tried to find words to describe what
was happening in his country.
"Ah, Zimbabwe,"
he eventually sighed. "Zimbabwe is dead."
The
figures
- GDP has declined
by 7.2 per cent this year, after a 4.2 per cent fall in 2004 and
a 10.7 per cent fall in 2003
- Rocketing
inflation, shortages of foreign exchange and a decline in farm
output have led to shortages of basic goods, including diesel
- The economy
has shrunk by 50 per cent since 1997, exports have fallen by two
thirds and living standards have retreated to levels last seen
in the mid-Fifties, according to estimates
- The IMF has
forecast the fiscal deficit to GDP ratio will double to 14.2 per
cent this year, from 7.1 per cent last year and 0.4 per cent in
2003
- Import volumes
expected to drop by 11.9 per cent this year, from 5.8 per cent
in 2004 and 19.9 per cent in 2003
- In 2000 primary
crop production was estimated at 2.5 million tonnes of cereals
in total compared with 1 million tonnes in 2003
- The IMF forecasts
that inflation will reach 400 per cent by the end of the year.
However, the Mugabe Government predicts that the economy will
grow by 2 per cent this year
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