Mail & Guardian

Zimbabwe still waits for liberation

After 37 years of independen­ce the president still promises economic uhuru to starving citizens

- Tendai Marima

Marching bands, long speeches and colourful acrobatic displays marked Zimbabwe’s 37th independen­ce celebratio­ns held around the country on Tuesday.

People filled Bulawayo’s White City Stadium, just as they do every year, to hear politician­s wax lyrical about the nation’s hard-won freedom while the crowd burns in the hot sun.

The end of white minority rule will, naturally, always be reason to cheer — especially here, the last African country to be freed from British colonial rule.

Like most born-frees, I’m thankful I never had the displeasur­e of living under white rule, but growing up under a black regime that has its own record of horrors and crises has shown that freedom is not a simple story of black triumph over white oppression.

Unlike South Africa, another April freedom child, Zimbabwe’s land and economy now largely lie in black hands. But whether state or private actors, the wealthy are a well-connected elite and the masses surviving on less than $2 a day are yet to attain their economic freedom.

In his 37th uhuru speech, and those read on his behalf by officials around the country, President Robert Mugabe spoke optimistic­ally about translatin­g the gains of liberation into economic empowermen­t. One of the last hurdles, he said, was reorganisi­ng the mining sector and transferri­ng 51% ownership of companies through a 2008 law to black Zimbabwean­s. In a speech, reform of the mining industry sounds wonderful, but the memories of Zimbabwe’s chaotic fast-track land reform programme of the 2000s are still too raw to take Mugabe’s proposal as a goodhearte­d nationalis­t’s gesture towards the people’s full liberation.

But still, some believe this economic uhuru shall come to pass. And, until then, the people shall eat the fruits of the land.

Unlike last year’s independen­ce dinner on April 17, when the food ran out and sadza, the maize meal staple dish, and boiled cabbage were the only things left, this year’s freedom ball seemed better financed. So was the independen­ce day lunch — buffalo and elephant meat were on the menu. The department of parks and wildlife donated the game meat.

Much to the ire of animal rights activists, elephants and buffaloes are eaten at some special gatherings in Zimbabwe.

Game is considered a delicacy among people in the drier, less fertile Matabelela­nd regions in the southern and western parts of the country. As a non-meat-eater it’s hard to see animals as food and I wouldn’t know if elephant tastes like spam or stewed biltong.

After 37 years of Mugabe rule, it’s neither here nor there what’s on the April 18 menu. What matters is the people with empty stomachs and pockets struggling through every day while corrupt liberators scoff from the trough.

Zimbabwe has a long way to go to achieve the resource transforma­tion Mugabe talks of. Knowing his Chimurenga way, an independen­ce speech on economic reform under the theme “Ease of Doing Business” is just sparring for another tug-ofwar between patriots and capitalist­s that could leave many civilian casualties, if and when it comes to pass. — The Daily Vox

 ?? Photo: Jekesai Njikizana/AFP ?? Waiting for uhuru: The Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns in Zimbabwe couldn’t mask the fact that President Robert Mugabe’s promised economic liberation has yet to materialis­e.
Photo: Jekesai Njikizana/AFP Waiting for uhuru: The Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns in Zimbabwe couldn’t mask the fact that President Robert Mugabe’s promised economic liberation has yet to materialis­e.

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