Don't you just love it! Ignatius Chombo, the minister of local government is at it again and truly believes that Harare's water problems are because the settlers settled in the wrong place and should have put the city in Mt Hampden. A friend of mine remarked the other day that if Chombo believes that Harare should have been built in Mt. Hampden, why not build another city there instead of blaming the settlers.
I guess the fact that 2 million people who were formerly employed in the agricultural sector have had to migrate to the urban areas because of a decimated rural economy has nothing to with it. The fact that we have not done any serious infrastructure projects since independence also has nothing to do with it. The graft and corruption within the city councils is, of course, also a non-issue for Chombo when it comes to service delivery and the maintenance of our infrastructure.
I think we have a problem; our ministers are not accountable at all and they just couldn't be bothered. Imagine a whole minister of mines who runs ZMDC and does not keep any records and becomes angry when asked why not. These guys are just too old to run this country, they have failed to move with the times when it comes to management and so we are effectively stuck with incompetents.
Politicians have an irritating habit of re-framing problems and denying answerability. This is a universal problem. According to the wisdom of ZANU (PF), our problems either come from outside our borders or the past; they therefore have played absolutely no role in creating the current conditions; how ridiculous!
When talking to a ZANU (PF) member the other day, I was amazed at how everyone has adapted this style of blaming everything on the past. The sad reality is that they actually believe the lie because it has been repeated so many times. Of course a major issue is that, after the struggle, our comrades never received counselling and they are therefore still suffering from post-traumatic stress and the past still looms large in their psyche. That is an issue that has never been addressed.
True; colonial structures were designed to entrench minority interests and control of both politics and the economy. What has happened is that, post-colonial liberation struggle political parties inherited these structures with pleasure and have used them just as the colonialist did. So institutions created by the settler regime are the same institutions that continue to benfit ZANU (PF) entrenched political and economic hegemony. They are extractive and are designed to benefit a few politicians and not the masses.