Dear Family and Friends,
What a strange, tangled web Zimbabwe weaves this August. On a political level is the meteoric rise of the President's wife who, in a single month, has gone from having no political standing at all to being nominated to take over as the head of Zanu PF Women's League and on the Zanu PF Central Committee by year end. Sixty-seater buses overtake you perilously on the highways at vast speed, their sides and backs plastered with Mrs Mugabe's face.
On an everyday level we've got wealth beyond imagining in upmarket suburbs of Harare where car parks bulge with top of the range vehicles. You suck in your breath and almost feel ashamed to park your twenty year old car between the Mercedes and the Prada, Pajero or black Hummer with its tinted windows. Meanwhile in other urban areas, out of sight and out of mind, there are people living in dark prefabricated wooden cabins and plastic shacks, where garbage rots in mounds along the roadsides and sewage flows on eroded, pot holed roads.
In a single week a patchwork of images provide the face of Zimbabwe. In an urban area a woman in a tight leopard print mini skirt and even tighter black top, wearing thin stemmed high heels, carries a 10 kilogram bag of maize meal on her head; on her back, wrapped in a striped towel, is a baby.
On a dusty detour approaching the capital city a ten tonne truck piled with skulls, cattle skulls, is exposed for all to see, many still with scraps of flesh and smears of blood on them. Along the road a man walks, carrying a plastic bag with a live chicken in it, its head sticking out the top.
Under a tree on the highway stand three policemen, one counting a thick wad of bank notes, keenly watched by the other two.