Zimbabwe's Architects of Poverty
As we speak, Barak Obama is working hard to ensure that Americans get better wages, get more jobs and that their children can go to varsity while their parents live a decent quality of life; it's good for the economy and its good for Americans. That is what a President must do.
As we speak ZANU (PF) is speculating on what to do next; we are actually getting tired of reports of infighting as if whoever "wins" will have better ideas. Companies are closing and jobs are scarce for our graduates. Our children are not sure whether they can ever go to varsity or get a decent job so that they can start their own new lives. In fact, most are probably planning to leave the country, I don't blame them.
Millions of Zimbabweans will face starvation in 2014 and we have an agriculture sector that needs pretty effortless but bold solutions. We must admit that we totally messed it up and must now use all the local skills and resources we have so that we may lift our country out of the rut. Each and every sector needs an "out of the box" solution divorced from ZANU (PF) culture of arrogance and incompetence. Fear has no room and the demagogue status of Mugabe must be rejected.
I do follow Manheru's column, in fact I quite enjoy it. However, at times I feel that he displays a rather unique and rare talent of compressing as little thought as possible in a large volume of words. For years and years, he continues to tell us how blessed we are to have such a wise and politically astute leader in Mugabe. What a pity because that wisdom has created nothing except strife, hopelessness, poverty and talented Zimbabweans leaving the country in droves. That is not good for business.
We need a new narrative. We need to accept that a singular narrative as peddled by Manheru, no matter how many times it is repeated, is dangerous for social progress and can only be judged by the results it has created on the ground. The true facts will not cease to exist simply because we ignore them.