"Je suis Charlie," from Zimbabwe
Dear Family and Friends,
The milk in my fridge has a sign on it boasting that it is "Proudly South African." The cheese, custard, butter, frozen vegetables, fruit juice and mayonnaise have the same sign. The cereals in the cupboard have labels announcing that they are "Proudly South African" so does the rice, coffee and biscuits. It's the same in the pantry cupboard where the tins, soup, noodles, washing powder and cleaning products all say ‘Made in South Africa.' This is how Zimbabwe greets 2015.
The sight of many hundreds of people standing in the cold, slanting rain on the road outside the passport office in my home town welcomed in the first week of 2015. For some unknown, bureaucratic reason people are still not allowed to queue inside the building, instead they must line up outside the gates exposed to all weathers, treated like livestock at a sale pen.
In the same week as the monster passport queues the rain had been coming down for days. Many of the roads through the town, so potholed and eroded after months without maintenance, had become almost impassable.
Un-cleared storm drains, filled with sand and litter made the drainage problem much worse; uncollected garbage spills out onto roads and pavements, sodden and rotting and everywhere comes news of floods. Stories of flooded bridges and roads, houses falling down, people being swept away in swollen rivers and families having to move to higher ground.