Yesterday I was in the Karoi District to help the local structures of the MDC organise for a bi-election in two weeks time. On the way back to Harare a huge storm built up over the top end of Mashonaland West - it was a massive front. Clouds towered up to 20 000 feet or more, the clouds were black and at the front of the storm was a band of high winds and some most peculiar lower clouds that were white. Across the open veld of the area and up to the Great Dyke this storm presented a spectacular example of a tropical storm.
At our meeting the weather was calm, almost no wind, the sun shone and we met under some trees in an abandoned building site. For three hours we discussed the way forward and how to handle the bi-election. Then the first wind came up and in half an hour the area was caught up in high winds, breaking trees and flattening crops and lifting roofs. Then came the rain - we could not see 10 metres ahead of us, the road was awash with running water, soon the rivers would be in flood.
In Zimbabwe it feels a bit like that, the sun is shining, there is a gentle breeze blowing - perfect day, but we can sense and even see the storm clouds gathering in the distant hills. What surprised us that afternoon was how fast it came and caught us on the road. These things can come fast and we need to be ready when it does.
Mr. Mugabe stayed in the country right up to Christmas but then took his usual annual holiday of one month in the Far East. He does this every year and the people who saw him at the Unity Day events in Bulawayo on the 23rd December, all remarked how frail and tired he looked.
Then, just after Christmas the Harare rumor mill began to churn - the President has collapsed in Singapore, then "the President is dead". Even Baba Jukwa - normally an informed commentator on all such things stated that all was not well and that the President may well have died. In our culture it's wrong to discuss the death of someone who is still alive and the whole thing was played down by the State media and spokespersons.
But then the State media stated that the President had been advised to come home early. Mr. Tsvangirai called on him to return to the country to deal with the economic and political crisis that grips the country. Then came a small announcement that Mr. Mugabe was on his way home and would arrive on the 11th January. No explanation of the three week cut back in his normal break and when he arrived at 07.00 hrs in the morning, there was none of the normal fanfare - lines of officials and Ministers to meet him and pictures of a rejuvenated and relaxed President running down the stairs of the plane.