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A year after Mugabe’s fall, Zimbabwe yearns for upswing

Robert Mugabe

Harare, Zimbabwe | AFP | Zimbabwean businessman Munya Chihota’s face lights up when he recalls taking part in a march last year with tens of thousands of people calling for then-president Robert Mugabe to step down.

The march came after the military had briefly taken over, and days before Mugabe was forced from power on November 21 in what the veteran leader described as a coup d’etat.

“There was so much joy,” 41-year-old Chihota told AFP, describing the outpouring of excitement as Zimbabweans waved flags and placards and sang songs urging an end to the nonagenarian strongman’s 37-year hold on power.

“We were all there. Young, old, black, white. There was a collective sense of hope that, after the hardships we had endured as a nation, things were going to change,” he said.

“The general feeling was that the system had to go.”

But Chihota now looks back on those euphoric times with mixed emotions.

“Unfortunately only an individual and a few of his hangers-on were removed, and the system remained in place.”

Mugabe, who held power since independence from British colonial rule in 1980, presided over Zimbabwe’s decline from a regional power with huge potential, to a ruined country from which millions fled.

Many hoped his fall would mark a new era for the country and a re-birth of its economy, but Chihota says business at his plastic manufacturing firm is at its slowest since he started eight years ago.

“A lot of things have turned out bad,” he said. “This is definitely not what we expected.”

– Elation turns to disillusion –

Mugabe maintained his stranglehold on power by using brutal tactics, deploying security forces to crush opponents and rivals.

Finally last year, when he reached the age of 93, a long-brewing succession battle burst into the open.

The military, fearing that Mugabe’s wife Grace, now 53, was being lined up to take over from him, sent tanks into the streets, seized control, and forced the president to resign.

The army top brass ushered in close ally Emmerson Mnangagwa, whom Mugabe had sacked as vice president weeks before.

Like Chihota, 24-year-old job-seeker Belina Mlilo recalls the heady days of Mugabe’s ouster with a sense of growing disillusion.

Having marched for Mugabe’s ouster, she now realises: “We made the mistake of thinking that Mugabe was the only problem.”

“We were used as pawns in the fight between (ruling party) ZANU-PF factions and now they don’t care about us.”

Mlilo has been unemployed since leaving college six years ago.

Mnangagwa, who secured his hold on power by winning disputed elections in July, had pledged to revive the economy, attract foreign investment, and create jobs.

But the dire financial problems of the Mugabe era haunt the new reality.

Unemployment is estimated at over 90 percent, and the economy has been cut in half since 2000 when many white-owned farms were seized.

Banks without cash, a government without money to spend, and inflation above 20 percent in October — Zimbabwe’s suffering shows no signs of ending.

– ‘Still waiting’ –

“We are still waiting for investors to come, for jobs to be created, and for prices to come down,” said economist John Robertson.

“The president has made inroads by arresting some people who were guilty of corruption — but the repercussions of (Mugabe’s) policy decisions are still with us and the government has not changed that.”

Shortages of basic goods have created a thriving black market, with some prices rising 200 percent in recent months. A litre of cooking oil can be sold for as much as $12 on the street compared to the retail price of $3.70.

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