Dear Family and Friends,
In the main supermarket in my
home town this weekend there were too many empty shelves to count. In the
fortnight since Mr Mugabe was sworn in as President for his sixth term, everyday
life has gone from struggle to complete crisis. No one is coping now and in the
last two weeks virtually all foodstuffs, toiletries and household goods have
completely disappeared from stores. On what should have been a busy weekend
morning in our once thriving town, the car park was virtually empty and the only
things to buy in the cavernous supermarket were cabbages, butternut squash,
lemons, fizzy drinks and a few packets of meat.
"Where are all your goods?" I
asked one shop attendant.
"There is nothing," he said, "the suppliers say
they have nothing to deliver."
I stood while he weighed the butternut squash
I had chosen and exclaimed in shock at the 30 billion dollar price sticker he
fixed to the vegetable.
"Can I show you something?" the man said and
before I could answer he took his most recent pay slip out of his pocket. For an
entire month the shop assistant had earned just 28 billion dollars - not even
enough to buy one single butternut squash. Eight hours a day, five and half days
a week and his entire salary was not enough to provide even one single meal. He
told me he had a wife and a child to support and said with remorse and shame in
his voice:
"I am failing them and if I do not jump the border to look for
work this month then they are surely going to die."
They are simple
words stating a simple fact - people are surely going to die here in Zimbabwe if
this situation continues for much longer. Despite their desperate determination
to stay in power and retain their 28 years of leadership of the country, Zanu PF
have so far not even acknowledged the critical shortage of foodstuffs and basic
medicines let alone done anything about resolving it.
Everywhere people
have stories of such deprivation and suffering to recount and we are a nation in
a permanent state of shock. Shock that our lives have been reduced to this.
Shock that yet again the UN have been unable to find a common voice. Shocked
that the violence and brutality continues and shocked that yet again we are
hearing of talks about talks about talks. On the 29th March the MDC won a
parliamentary majority, It is long past time for them to be sworn in and take up
the reigns and lead Zimbabwe out of this hell.
Until next week, thanks for
reading, love,