Zimbabwean
Ruins
Zimbabwe
at independence had so much going for it. Tremendous tourist
potential with spectacular scenery, well stocked game reserves,
spectacular tourist attractions such as the Victoria Falls (one
of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World), a pleasant temperate
climate, tremendous natural resources, gold, platinum and other
precious ores, a modern banking sector, skilled manufacturers
and an efficient road and railway network. The Zimbabwean people
were among the best educated in Africa. And Zimbabwe was blessed
with one of the most productive and efficient agricultural economies
in Africa.
Yet 24 years after independence, Zimbabweans are dramatically
poorer and have greatly shortened life expectancy. At independence
a Rhodesian dollar was worth more than an American dollar. Today
it would take 20000 Zimbabwe dollars to buy one US dollar. Pastors
have been arrested, journalists have been tortured, Opposition
Members of Parliament have been jailed, farmers have been murdered
and judges have been attacked.
What went wrong?
The answer to that question hangs on the wall of every office
and shop in the country. Portraits of Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe's
marxist president, stare down upon the long-suffering Zimbabwean
people who have experienced one of the most shocking economic
collapses of any country in history.
Despite Mugabe declaring himself a marxist and inviting North
Koreans to train his army, many Western governments chose to
shower Zimbabwe with aid. Because of the extravagant generosity
of these Western governments, Mugabe was able to maintain his
incompetent and corrupt regime amidst an illusion of prosperity.
However, the longer the Mugabe regime was in power, and the
more corrupt his cronies became, donors grew tired of handing
over money just to see it squandered and embezzled.
In 1997 ZANU 'veterans of the Liberation War' rioted when it
was learned that the fund intended to compensate them had been
looted by ZANU officials. By printing more money Mugabe was
able to calm the rioters while also inflating the currency.
That was the same year Mugabe promised to seize, without compensation,
land belonging to the white commercial farmers.
Even as the Zimbabwe Dollar plunged at the news, Mugabe decided
to send a quarter of his army to fight in the Congo to prop
up fellow marxist dictator Kabila. To fund this foreign military
adventure, he printed even more bank notes, causing massive
inflation and rapid impoverishment. Soon a worker's bus fare
cost more than his monthly earnings. Workers complained that
the Zimbabwe government grabbed half their wages in taxes and
then eroded the value of what was left by printing too much
money and causing astronomic inflation.
Mugabe's solution to much of the economic chaos, caused by his
socialist policies, has been price fixing. When the local currency
collapsed, he tried to fix the exchange rate - expecting people
to willingly exchange hard currency for the now hugely overvalued
Zimbabwean dollar. Naturally, no one with hard currency wanted
to be robbed, so the supply of hard currency dried up. When
Mugabe ordered bakers to sell loaves for less than they cost
to bake, the stores ran out of bread. Price fixing is rather
like jumping off a tall building while shouting: "I abolish
the law of gravity!"
"He who works his land will have abundant food, but the
one who chases fantasies will have his fill of poverty."
Proverbs 28:19
Mugabe's disregard for the laws of economics have also been
matched by his contempt for private property. 5000 productive
farms have been seized by government organised mobs. Vast herds
of cattle and wildlife have been slaughtered. Crops and stores
burned. Farm houses looted. Many people beaten or murdered.
One of the most productive agricultural economies in Africa
has been systematically destroyed. Not only did these farms
feed the entire nation - they also exported food, providing
the highest percentage of foreign exchange earnings. These commercial
farms were also the largest employer of labour in the country
and provided homes for over 2 million farm workers and their
dependants.
Those who claim that Mugabe is involved in "land reform"
need to go and actually visit those farms that have apparently
been "settled". What were once some of the most productive
farms in Africa, providing employment, filling the market place
with food, providing produce for export and bringing in foreign
currency, are now derelict and deserted. The mobs came in, to
loot, pillage and destroy, and in most cases, after killing
off the livestock and wildlife, returned back to the shantytowns
near the city. Some farms have become personal residences for
ZANU officials (When Vice President Joshua Nkomo died in 1999,
it was found that his estate included 16 farms).
Along with Mugabe's land invaders vandalising farms and breaking
farm worker's legs, Mugabe's campaign of terror has also destroyed
the tourist trade. Those companies that have gone bankrupt have
been accused by Mugabe of "deliberately sabotaging the
economy". The so called "war veterans" (many
of whom were too young to have fought in a war that ended 24
years ago) have been portrayed in state owned media as "a
spontaneous expression of land hunger". But these invaders
arrived in ZANU trucks, were paid and fed by the security forces
and organised by CIO officials with cellphones.
The millions of farm workers and their families have been beaten
and terrorised by the ZANU youth brigade and "war veterans".
Families who have lost their jobs, and often also their homes,
have been a prime target of government organised thuggery. Youth
militia and war veterans armed with pangas, guns and clubs have
compelled farm workers to attend political "re-education"
sessions. This re-education includes listening to hours of Marxist
diatribe and singing revolutionary songs. Mugabe's thugs have
set up road blocks to check that passengers, on passing busses,
each have their ZANU party membership cards. Tens of thousands
of ordinary people in Zimbabwe have been beaten and terrorised
by the ZANU youth brigade and the war veterans.
"They promise them freedom, while they themselves
are slaves of depravity." 2 Peter 3:19
Now that Zimbabwe is undergoing a severe food shortage and famine,
Mugabe is blaming the weather. However, now that the commercial
farmers who had safely seen the country through all previous
droughts have been driven off their lands, drought inevitably
leads to famine. People are dying of starvation in Zimbabwe
today while the ZANU government seeks to monopolise all food
distribution, loudly proclaiming that they will ensure that
supporters of the MDC opposition starve. The population of Zimbabwe
is about 12 million yet one senior ZANU-PF leader Didymus Mutasa
has declared: "We would be better off with only 6 million
people, with our own people who support the liberation struggle.
We don't want all these extra people."
"Their mouths are full of cursing and bitterness;
their feet are swift to shed blood; ruin and misery mark their
ways." Romans 3:15-16
They
promise them freedom, while they themselves are slaves of depravity.
2 Peter 3:19
He who works his land will have abundant food, but the
one who chases fantasies will have his fill of poverty.
Proverbs 28:19
Please pray for our ongoing ministries to feed starving Christians
and work for Biblical Reformation in Zimbabwe.