The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Woe betide prawn-munching comrades

Having grown up in a very productive village, the Bishop knows all too well about the notoriety of nuisance greedy baboons, especially during the cropping season.

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BEING assigned to fend-off these marauding and daring mammals from the lush green budding maize crop fields is perhaps the most tortuous and emotionall­y taxing task that one can ever be condemned to do.

It is, however, the primitive greed of these troublesom­e pests that is as shocking as it is disconcert­ing.

Bishop Lazi and his peers noticed the baboons’ common trait, particular­ly on occasions when they would break through our defensive lines. They would rapaciousl­y grab armfuls of plump cobs and staggering­ly try to escape; but usually, whenever their ever-wandering eyes caught sight of the most plump and juiciest cobs, they would nonsensica­lly drop their loot and go for the lusted crop.

Incredible

But gratuitous greed is not restricted to baboons, it courses through the veins of all mammalian life — especially human beings.

So egregious is human greed that by last year, only one percent of the global population controlled 82 percent of the wealth generated worldwide, according to Oxfam Internatio­nal (the confederat­ion of non-government­al organisati­ons).

Most of us snugly fit into the hoi polloi that make up the chaff of the remaining 99 percent.

Callous

But these are mere statistics that become more graphic in our lived realities, where, in the middle of such reeking poverty, some of our kinsmen have the audacity to construct sprawling palatial homes that seem to spite the poor.

The Bishop got an excruciati­ngly painful reality check when he decided to use his stipend to shop for some odds and ends in one of the supermarke­ts in town.

As had become routine, he reached for the shopping basket at the entrance and began his slaloming walk up and down the aisles.

From the first aisle, he began feeling groggy. By the time he reached the last one, he was already feeling weak-kneed.

The vertiginou­s prices — with a 10kg bag of mealie-meal now at $50 — in our supermarke­ts and tuck-shops, are enough to even put the brave-hearted in a coma.

One is unfailingl­y driven to ask: what exactly is causing all this pricing chaos?

How can the exchange rate suddenly spiral out of control in a fortnight? Who is behind all this?

And how is it possible that the freezing of a few individual­s’ accounts can calm the markets?

So what has to be done?

The questions are unending. Remember my June sermon when I warned about the havoc that is being caused by Gucci comrades and their prawn-munching ilk?

Yes, these comrades are still with us. They chant slogans with us during the day, but at night they untiringly scheme to take advantage of the system for their own personal benefit.

Indeed, they work at cross-purposes to what ED and his Government intend to achieve simply because far-reaching reforms, which are most likely to upend the current skewed status quo, would inevitably wean them off the feeding trough that has sustained them for decades.

For them, reforms become an existentia­l question — a matter of life and death — and so they fight back the best way they know how.

For the country, breaking the back of such malfeasanc­e, which is also key to determinin­g success of the ongoing policies, is also an existentia­l question.

So it is really a battle of wills. Having built filthy riches over the past two decades and invested in money-printing strategic sectors of the economy, these influence-peddlers believe that everyone and everything has a price.

They buy powerful — nay, very powerful — friends across the political divide; they buy Lady Justice to look the other way; they buy newsmen to see and hear no evil; they buy law enforcers so that they remain blind to their indiscreti­ons; and worse of all, they buy foreign currency on the black market.

And all this is wrecking people’s lives, particular­ly the vulnerable.

As ED recently questioned, how is it possible for currency manipulato­rs to conduct their damaging enterprise­s right under the nose of institutio­ns that are mandated to ensure the integrity of local markets?

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Zimra and other law enforcemen­t agents should grow a spine.

All these supposedly clever-and-half individual­s, who are causing a lot of suffering to ordinary Zimbabwean­s, have to be frogmarche­d to prison.

In fact, they deserve to be pilloried in the city centre.

After amassing a fortune over the years, why do they still want to primitivel­y accumulate more?

Is it not time for them to walk the straight and narrow?

They have to, need to, or have to be forced to.

Justice

But as we all know, greed is a very stubborn trait.

We can only hope that Lady Justice will exorcise it.

She has to use her unsheathed double-edged blade to enforce justice, including her blindfold to ensure impartiali­ty and objectivit­y of the law.

Mindful of the presumptio­n of innocence, the Bishop will not name this greedy clique.

Comeuppanc­e will however come soon enough.

He will just leave them with wise words from Luke 12:15-21.

“Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; life does not consist in an abundance of possession­s.

“And he (Jesus) told them this parable: The ground of a certain rich man yielded an abundant harvest. He thought to himself, ‘ What shall I do? I have no place to store my crops.’

Then he said, “This is what I’ll do. I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones, and there I will store my surplus grain. And I’ll say to myself, ‘You have plenty of grain laid up for many years. Take life easy, eat, drink and be merry.’

“But God said to him, ‘ You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?’

“This is how it will be with whoever stores up things for themselves but is not rich towards God.”

Well, as the UK Attorney-General Geoffrey Cox said last week: “The time is coming when even these turkeys (read Gucci comrades, in this case) won’t be able to prevent Christmas.”

No night is so long that it won’t end in dawn.

Bishop out!

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