The State of the Nation
I have always thought that the American idea of an annual "State of the Nation" address by the President to both Houses in Washington DC was a great idea. It serves both as an opportunity to look back and then to assess where the country is right now and last, a look into the future.
The New Year of 2014 is just ahead of us and I thought it would be an appropriate time to do some thinking about the state of Zimbabwe as a nation. First some retrospection:
My Great Grandfather, G W Cross came out to Africa in 1867. About that time the first tentative incursions of people with a European background began to enter Zimbabwe, most crossed the Limpopo and came either as Missionaries or hunters. They were preceded by slavers and explorers from Portugal and other places in the Mediterranean region.
In 1893 the first really major incursion took place and the colonization of Zimbabwe began. After two short wars against the indigenous population, the flag was run up a pole in Harare and we became an outpost of the British Empire, in 1923 the tiny handful of settlers decided not to join the new Union of South Africa but to become a Dominion - just like Canada and Australia. What followed was nearly 60 years of settler government - the Second World War, our own Civil War of liberation and then Independence in 1980.
For all their faults, the European settlers did a remarkable job; they established a small modern State with a Constitution, the rule of law (Roman Dutch) and an elected legislature. They built thousands of kilometers of railway line, tens of thousands of kilometers of roads and a national electricity generation and distribution system and in the process created a diversified economy anchored on agriculture, industry and mining. A tiny army (two Brigades at half strength) and a remarkable Civil Service that was apolitical and proficient as well as honest. By 1979 over 90 per cent of what we bought in a supermarket was made in Zimbabwe and we had a currency which was worth twice as much as the US dollar and virtually no debt.