The Independence Dividend
We are in a real state again. The economy is shrinking, confidence is below zero, business is closing down all over the country, there is little new investment, the Government cannot fund the budget and is near the end of its tether. Our social and economic institutions are all in a crisis caused by underfunding and we remain a pariah State. What is there to celebrate?
The skeptics of old all say "we told you so" and those of us who worked so hard and long for change up to Independence and then threw ourselves into building the new country in 1980, are deeply disappointed with our "Independence Government". They make use of every opportunity to beat the drum and state that "we brought you freedom", "we took our country back" and those who claim all this will not tolerate any view that things were better in the distant past.
Young people, the "born free's" look at us mystified - they have no knowledge of the past, only the present and to them, comparing our situation to that in Zambia, South Africa and Botswana, is nothing short of a disaster. They cannot find work, job opportunities have shrunk from 1,2 million in 2000 to 500 000 today. Salaries are low and credit unobtainable so that they are unable to get a bond with which to buy a home or vehicle finance - something that is the norm in nearly every society on earth.
But sitting in a coffee shop in Harare today surrounded by people of every nationality and colour, I commented to a couple of friends that this is the dividend of Independence. What were we looking at? We had at our table a young man who was born after Independence and is now in investment banking - confident, erudite and well informed - worked in South Africa after University and now come "home" to have a go at making a living. My other colleague and I were products of the struggle - he had been detained until Independence.
I recalled a meeting of the Council of Churches in Harare in 1974, addressed by Ndabaningi Sithole - the first leader of Zanu in Zimbabwe. He had just been released from detention after 10 years. He had been taken from his prison in the Midlands and flown to Zambia in the Presidential Jet and then flown home and now he was talking to us about his vision for the future. He talked about his experience of visiting an Independent African State (Zambia) and of being flown by a wholly black crew to Lusaka.