Zimbabwe: Fast starving:
Starving fast
(our
added comments about a
pretty good interview
unaltered
-- Piet Rudolph)
Comment from The Cape
Times (SA),
26 July
2007
My Zim contact explains
why fasting is good for
the people
Doc Mtusi
must be one of the few
people who understands
Zimbabwe's economic
policy. He knows what's
going on even better
than his boss, Finance
Minister Samuel
Mumbengegwi, who
announced in Masvingo
(Old Fort Victoria) that
there was no need for
people to hoard food.
"But if people don't
hoard food, what will
they eat when all the
shops run empty?" I
asked him, after he
agreed to be interviewed
this week.
"Who
says they'll run empty?"
retorted Doc, who made
me promise I would
report him faithfully.
"Shelves
are already empty of
basic foodstuffs," I
pointed out.
"Then we'll just order
shopkeepers to fill them
again," said Doc. "We've
already jailed quite a
few who refused to. It's
simple economics. We
will also jail anyone
who hoards food, because
that is what empties the
shelves in the first
place."
"Sorry to cross swords
with you on this, Doc,
but your government is
forcing shopkeepers to
sell all their existing
stocks for less than
they paid for them. How
can you expect them to
buy in more supplies at
the wholesale price if
they know that by
selling them at the
government's retail rate
they'll make an even
bigger loss. It's a
quick way to go
bankrupt."
"No
one ever said saving
Zimbabwe's economy would
be easy," explained Doc.
"We all have to make
sacrifices."
"My point is you can't
blame shoppers for
thinking that, unless
they quickly buy up
what's left, there'll
soon be no food to buy,"
I said. "They are not
stupid. They can see
that all the shopkeepers
will either be bankrupt
or in jail."
"And my point is that
the unpatriotic hoarding
of food gives the
impression that we have
a problem, which clearly
we haven't, except in
the South African
media's mind," said Doc.
"I'm surprised Mbeki
still lets you write
this nonsense. We are
relying on Comrade Zuma
to make you change your
tune, once he takes
over."
"But until then, Doc,
why have you now even
passed a law to stop
Zimbabweans importing
food from South Africa?
If they can't hoard
food, they have to get
it from somewhere.
Otherwise they'll
starve."
"We don't call it
starving," said Doc, "we
call it fasting. Fasting
is actually good for
you. Lots of famous
people have fasted for
the benefit of their
people. Gandhi, for
instance. In our case,
the people themselves
will be encouraged to
fast, thereby
strengthening themselves
against the onslaught of
colonial imperialism."
"I'm sure they really
would prefer to eat," I
said. "Most people do."
"We
have no objection in
principle to people
eating," conceded Doc.
"Those of us in
government all eat, but
only because persons in
our important positions
have to. What we must
guard against, though,
is the belief that
ordinary people have the
right to break the law
if they are hungry."
"That's how the French
Revolution started," I
said.
"Thank goodness we won
our revolution 27
glorious years ago,"
declared Doc. "So
there's no need to
worry."