I first arrived in Ethiopia in 1977.I still remember Ethiopians wishing for
the pre-revolution days of the Emperor (overthrown in 1974).every other
African country I served in or visited afterwards, the common people fondly
remembered the European colonialists.they are right, Africa was better under
European rule.

 

They only thought, at the time of "independence", that they would rather be
misruled by one of their own than well-ruled by foreigners.

 

 

 

  _____  

From: 
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2005 7:15 AM
To: Bruce Tefft
Subject: A Morsel of Goat Meat

 

"If we had the chance to go back to white rule, we'd do it," said Solomon
Dube, a peasant whose child was crying with hunger when I arrived in his
village. "Life was easier then, and at least you could get food and a job."

 

Kristof's entire column outlines how much better life was for the peasants
of Zimbabwe under white rule, and how many of them would bring back the
whites if they could. How could such a committed leftist write such stuff?
Then you get to the last sentence and realize he is saying it's all our
fault that the country became what it is by letting Mugabe get away with it.
It is "our hypocrisy" that is costing hundreds of Zinbabwean lives every
day. Unfriggenbelievable!

 

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/23/opinion/23kristof.html

 


March 23, 2005


OP-ED COLUMNIST 


A Morsel of Goat Meat


By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
<http://www.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/nichol
asdkristof/index.html?inline=nyt-per>  


 

Binga, Zimbabwe - The hungry children and the families dying of AIDS here
are gut-wrenching, but somehow what I find even more depressing is this:
Many, many ordinary black Zimbabweans wish that they could get back the
white racist government that oppressed them in the 1970's.

"If we had the chance to go back to white rule, we'd do it," said Solomon
Dube, a peasant whose child was crying with hunger when I arrived in his
village. "Life was easier then, and at least you could get food and a job."

Mr. Dube acknowledged that the white regime of Ian Smith was awful. But now
he worries that his 3-year-old son will die of starvation, and he would
rather put up with any indignity than witness that.

An elderly peasant in another village, Makupila Muzamba, said that hunger
today is worse than ever before in his seven decades or so, and said: "I
want the white man's government to come back. ... Even if whites were
oppressing us, we could get jobs and things were cheap compared to today."

His wife, Mugombo Mudenda, remembered that as a younger woman she used to
eat meat, drink tea, use sugar and buy soap. But now she cannot even afford
corn gruel. "I miss the days of white rule," she said.

Nearly every peasant I've spoken to in Zimbabwe echoed those thoughts,
although it's also clear that some still hail President Robert Mugabe as a
liberator. This is a difficult place to gauge the mood in, because foreign
reporters are barred from Zimbabwe and promised a prison sentence of up to
two years if caught. I sneaked in at Victoria Falls and traveled around the
country pretending to be a tourist.

The human consequences of the economic collapse are heartbreaking. I visited
a hospital and a clinic that lacked both medicines and doctors. Children die
routinely for want of malaria medication that costs just a few dollars.

At one maternity ward, 21 women were sitting outside, waiting to give birth.
No nurse or doctor was in sight, and I asked the women when they had last
eaten meat, eggs or other protein. They laughed uproariously. Lilian Dube, a
24-year-old who had hiked 11 miles to get to the hospital, said that she had
celebrated Christmas with a morsel of goat meat.

"Before that, the last time I had meat was Christmas the year before," she
said. "I just eat corn porridge and mnyi," a kind of wild fruit.

An elementary school I visited had its fifth graders meeting outside,
because it doesn't have enough classrooms. Like other schools, it raises
money by charging fees for all students - driving pupils away.

"Only a few of the kids who started in grade one are still with me in
school," Charity Sibanda, a fifth-grader, told me. "Some dropped out because
they couldn't pay school fees. And some died of AIDS."

As many as a third of working-age Zimbabweans have AIDS or H.I.V., and every
15 minutes a Zimbabwean child dies of AIDS. Partly because of AIDS, life
expectancy has dropped over the last 15 years from 61 to 34, and 160,000
Zimbabwean children will lose a parent this year. 

AIDS is not President Mugabe's fault, but the collapse of the health system
has made the problem far worse. 

The West has often focused its outrage at Mr. Mugabe's seizure of farms from
white landowners, but that is tribalism on our part. The greatest suffering
by far is among black Zimbabweans.

I can't put Isaac Mungombe out of my mind. He's sick, probably dying of
AIDS, and his family is down to one meal a day. His wife, Jane, gave birth
to their third child, Amos, six months ago at home because she couldn't
afford $2 to give birth in the hospital. No one in the family has shoes, and
the children can't afford to attend school. They're a wonderful, loving
family, and we chatted for a long time - but Isaac and Jane will probably
soon die of AIDS, and the children will join the many other orphans in the
village.

When a white racist government was oppressing Zimbabwe, the international
community united to demand change. These days, a black racist government is
harming the people of Zimbabwe more than ever, and the international
community is letting Mr. Mugabe get away with it. Our hypocrisy is costing
hundreds of Zimbabwean lives every day. 

E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 



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