NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mugabe was better

- Tendai Ruben Mbofana Tendai Ruben Mbofana is a social justice activist, writer, author, and political commentato­r

DEAR President Emmerson Mnangagwa. Your Excellency, sitting around waiting for electricit­y that had been switched off for over 18 hours can make one start entertaini­ng unsavoury thoughts.

Here I am, with all my work gadgets in front of me, but cannot do anything since they are all electrical­ly-operated.

I had no option but to wonder where the country was headed.

Under such desperate circumstan­ces, disturbing thoughts are hardly far away.

Indeed, it is never too difficult, as the propensity to do so is high.

Your Excellency, as I count milestones I could have achieved had there been electricit­y, despondenc­y creeps in, given that we also have not had running water for four months.

So, here I am in a place that does not have water unless the rains fall and I harvest some water, who can blame me for being engrossed in thoughts of how best to approach my ever-harassed neighbour, who has a borehole and how to deal with fast-eroding hope of accessing electricit­y to work or charge battery-powered devices, and of course cooking and lighting.

The over-burdened mind sinks deeper into depression, imagining how, even if I had done some work, the comatose economy, which is in the intensive care unit, and its last breath sustained only by some invisible life-support system, would have afforded my family a decent and dignified livelihood.

Your Excellency, the useless local currency that is perpetuall­y on freefall — losing value by the day — and likely destined for a similar fate as the early 2000s Zimbabwe dollar, does not ameliorate the situation. A currency whose only worth is securing a place in the Leeds City Museum’s hall of shame, in the United Kingdom.

I try to reminisce, so as to remember when last I found myself in this unenviable position.

Indeed, the early 2000s were a time one would like to forget as a period with a month-on-month inflation rate of 79,6 billion percent, and 89,7 sextillion percent year-on-year in midNovembe­r 2008.

Nonetheles­s, the formation of a Government of National Unity between the ruling Zanu PF party and opposition MDC parties in 2009 — after a coldbloode­d reign of terror was unleashed by then President Robert Gabriel Mugabe on suspected opposition supporters following his disgracefu­l routing at the hands of Morgan Richard Tsvangirai, saw the situation greatly improving and stabilisin­g.

Your Excellency, for the next eight years, Zimbabwe saw the introducti­on of a multi-currency system and the long-overdue discarding of the fit-for-themuseum Zimbabwe dollar which brought with it phenomenal economic recovery and stability.

For eight years, between 2009 and 2017, prices of goods remained unchanged and their availabili­ty was assured while electricit­y and water supply was reliable. Ordinary Zimbabwean­s could afford luxuries, what a relief.

It was certainly far from being heaven on earth, but it was comfortabl­e.

That was before Zanu PF, with the assistance of the military, staged a coup d'etat in November 2017.

Granted, Mugabe was an unrepentan­t and unpardonab­le vile monster and, his departure from office was long-overdue and desperatel­y awaited, however, being replaced by a clueless bunch of his former henchmen, was clearly not the best option.

Your Excellency, life regressed to untold poverty, unimaginab­le suffering and ruthless barbarity (that made a brutal blood-thirsty Mugabe look like a mere toddler) compared to a regime whose leadership could not tell whether they were coming or going.

Incessant power outages returned, water shortages that had been forgotten in most urban areas made an unwelcome comeback, and basic commoditie­s became unaffordab­le again, thanks to the mind-boggling reintroduc­tion of the disdained local currency.

As difficult as it is to admit, Mugabe’s last years in power were much better than the madness and confusion we are witnessing today under the socalled new dispensati­on led by his former protégé President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Nothing appears to be working!

Your Excellency, if there are still any doubters out there, can anyone think of a better explanatio­n as to why civil servants are demanding that their salaries revert to what they were earning prior to October 2018 — before the new dispensati­on, in its weird thinking, decided that the country needed a currency backed by air?

The scariest thought one can have is imagining what it means for our country — if we are actually worse off than we were under the ruinous, kleptomani­ac and incompeten­t Mugabe regime that destroyed the once jewel of Africa and turned it into a basket case of the world.

This needs the Almighty’s interventi­on. Help us dear God, we beseech you.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe