Political and Economic Chaos
Whenever I sit down to write this weekly letter, I am faced with a dilemma as to what I might say about the immediate situation in the country. I have often described watching the situation in Zimbabwe as like being an observer of a medieval clash between two armies in Europe a thousand years ago. The opposing forces gather on the hills overlooking an open valley and then move down to clash on the valley floor.
Observers on the hills cannot make out who is who or what is actually happening and what the outcome will be, but gradually it becomes apparent that one side is winning and in the end the victors hold the field while the defeated limp off the battlefield leaving their dead and wounded to the mercy of the victors.
In the past three months watchers of the political scene here would have felt very much the same way about the conflicts raging in the Zanu PF Party. Even now at this late stage it is difficult to see just who is "winning". It's quite clear who is "losing" and the body count is rising by the hour, but there are so many elements at play that we might have to wait for a while before we can truly judge just who has come out on top.
For those of us who have the privilege of not being combatants and at the same time holding a good vantage point from which to observe the battle, one thing is sure, the aftermath is going to be a sorry state of affairs. The "victors" are bloodied and weary, the "defeated" are stunned and shocked, both by the speed of their defeat and the brutality with which it was carried out. No quarter was given and no measures or weapons held back.
But the one thing that everyone needs to understand is that this struggle on the political playing field is doing nothing to solve our immediate problems and they are many. In fact, this battle is merely a diversion and has forced the key decision makers to take their eyes off the real issues confronting us as a nation. The battle is absorbing resources and attention that is urgently needed to tackle our immediate problems; it is deepening the crisis we all face.