Zimbabwe: A country in crisis

Zimbabwean soldiers control civilian traffic in Harare on November 15, 2017. PHOTO |WILFRED KAJESE | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The country, while home to abundant mineral resources — platinum, gold, diamonds and nickel — suffers from a disastrous economic and financial situation.
  • Zimbabwe is a landlocked country in southern Africa, bounded by Mozambique, South Africa, Botswana and Zambia.

HARARE

A factfile on Zimbabwe:

  • Rhodesia

After British settlers moved in from South Africa, attracted by mineral wealth and later by farming, in the late 19th century the mining magnate Cecil Rhodes was to give his name to what became the British colony of Southern Rhodesia.

In 1965, when most remaining European colonies in Africa were obtaining independence under black majority rule, the tiny white minority in Southern Rhodesia broke away from Britain, forming a racist regime similar to that in neighbouring South Africa.

This led to a bloody liberation war from 1972, led by Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo. At least 27,000 died.

  • Zimbabwe born amid euphoria

The war culminated in the country's independence, negotiated under British auspices, in April 1980 and Southern Rhodesia was renamed Zimbabwe.

The country was in jubilation and the world hailed the birth of a model for Africa.

In a Harare stadium hundreds of thousands of people witnessed the hoisting of the new flag and reggae star Bob Marley performed one of his songs to celebrate independence.

Canaan Banana became president, but this was an honorary position, with Mugabe, the prime minister, holding the reins of power.

In 1987 Mugabe became head of state after reforming the constitution to usher in a presidential regime.

  • 37 years in power

In the years that followed his coming to power Mugabe kindled hope. He reached out to the white minority and put in place a social policy that benefitted the black majority, up to then looked down on.

The tipping point came in February 2000 when his powers were weakened by the rejection, at a referendum, of a new draft constitution.

Mugabe began a process of expropriating farms from the white minority and giving the land to blacks, in a process that led to accusations of corruption and cronyism.

In March 2002 Mugabe was re-elected president in a poll marred by violence and widely denounced as rigged.

In March, 2008, his ZANU-PF party was defeated by Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in parliamentary polls. Tsvangirai won the first-round presidential vote, but withdrew from the second round, citing violence against his supporters. Mugabe was inaugurated for a new term.

In 2013 Mugabe was declared re-elected and his party won a two-thirds majority in parliament.

  • Economic disaster

The country, while home to abundant mineral resources — platinum, gold, diamonds and nickel — suffers from a disastrous economic and financial situation.

Southern Africa's former bread basket, Zimbabwe's agricultural production plummeted in the wake of the farm reform.

In 2009 the government dumped the Zimbabwean dollar for the US dollar and the South African rand after the national currency collapsed, causing galloping inflation up to 500 billion percent.

The crisis had led to mass unemployment — with nearly nine out of ten of the active population out of work — the collapse of many public services and the increasing scarcity of cash. In October 2017 Zimbabwe banned imports of fruit and vegetables to save its currency.

  • Landlocked

Zimbabwe is a landlocked country in southern Africa, bounded by Mozambique, South Africa, Botswana and Zambia.

Covering 390,308 square kilometres, its population stood at 16.15 million in 2016 according to the World Bank. Around half of the population are Christians, mainly Anglicans, and 40 percent are Animist.

The Victoria Falls, on the Zambezi River on the border between Zimbabwe and Zambia, are a key destination for foreign tourists.