Dear Family and Friends,
Summer has arrived in Zimbabwe: the spring colours in the trees have
turned into shade, the voices of orioles, coucals, hoopoes and shrikes
have joined the dawn chorus and everywhere the red dust rises and
settles at the slightest movement. For the last few evenings an
unusual spectacle has unfolded in the red and orange sky of twilight.
A few minutes after six pm bats start to appear, a couple at first
then more arrive until as many as fifteen large bats are flitting
across the garden. In amongst the bats suddenly there are nightjars:
two, three and then half a dozen, gliding and swirling, snatching at
insects in the deepening dusk. After a few nights of witnessing the
twilight display I found myself waiting for the bats at 6pm but knew
something was wrong when one evening nothing came at all. Then with a
slow, leisurely flapping, an owl flew in and perched on the telephone
post. The master predator had arrived and everything that once was
normal was suddenly gone.
This is exactly how life in Zimbabwe feels right now. Routine and
normal has all but disappeared and the word constantly on your lips,
in your mind, is 'shame.' Hundreds and hundreds of people line the
pavements outside banks waiting for money. It's the same in towns
and cities around the country. Shame! you exclaim at the huge lines
outside supermarkets where people wait desperately to be able to
withdraw cash top ups with their groceries. Shame! you whisper under
your breath as you navigate around crutches, patched wheelchairs and
home-made walking sticks, ashamed to catch the eye of pensioners
waiting to withdraw their two week late pensions from savings banks
which don't have any money. Shame on the Zimbabwe government for
reducing us all to beggars and paupers again, for the second time in
just seven years.
Shame! you utter out loud at the growing number of empty or nearly
empty shelves in supermarkets: washing powder, cereals, biscuits,
pasta, dairy products, cheese, toiletries are all running out. OH NO!
here we go again, you think with a feeling of dread and despair in
your stomach. Shame on the Zimbabwe government for banning imports
when 80% of our requirements have to come from outside our borders.
Shame on them for preparing to re-introduce a worthless local currency
because this is exactly why supermarket shelves are emptying: you
cannot pay for imported products with a worthless Bond dollar.
Shame! you exclaim when you the Minister of Finance reports that the
Zimbabwe government's wage bill consumes 96.8% of their total
budget. No wonder we are falling apart; no wonder water, electricity
and transport infrastructure is crumbling; no wonder we are
suffocating in debt. Slight improvement appears possible when the
Minister of Finance proposes civil service job cuts, salary cuts and
no annual bonuses but shame returns when days later the government
reverses all the cost cutting measures announced by their own Minister
of Finance. Any chance of international re-engagement and relief after
this evaporates instantly.
Shame! is the only word you can use to describe the latest wave of
evictions of commercial farmers from their properties. Coming at a
time when over 4 million people, a third of our population, need world
food aid to survive, evicting productive farmers from their land
because of their skin colour makes no sense at all; it is greed and
racism, pure and simple.
As I write this letter the police have announced a further ban on
demonstrations, in violation, again, of our constitution. Opposition
parties and activists say they will defy the ban. The Master Predator
is in the garden and we all just want to have a normal life. A
collision course seems inevitable. Until next time, please keep the
people of Zimbabwe in your hearts, love cathy. 16th Sept 2016.
Copyright Cathy Buckle. www.cathybuckle.com
http://www.cathybuckle.com/