Zimbabweans brace for bleak holidays

Zimbabweans are facing bleak holidays this year amid rising poverty, food and cash shortages and political uncertainty, with some describing it as the worst since the formation of the coalition government in the southern African nation.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012
In this photo taken late Thursday Dec. 20, 2012, people walk past Christmas decorations at a shopping mall in Harare, Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe will join the rest of the world in celebrating the Christmas season in a manner that reflects its tradition and culture. Thousands of people are set to travel across the country to be with their families in rural areas.

Zimbabweans are facing bleak holidays this year amid rising poverty, food and cash shortages and political uncertainty, with some describing it as the worst since the formation of the coalition government in the southern African nation.President Robert Mugabe, in a four-year-old coalition with former opposition leader Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, announced an extra public holiday Monday which has created chaos for holiday shoppers and travelers. Banks have closed, ATMs have run out of cash and transport services have been paralyzed.This caps a year of political uncertainty, a deadlock in constitutional reforms and calls for elections in coming months, seen as critical for Mugabe, 88, who has ruled since independence from Britain in 1980.In 2008, Mugabe’s party was accused of vote-rigging and blamed for the worst election violence since independence. As the election tempo quickens, political intimidation has resurfaced, according to independent human rights groups.Zimbabwe’s unemployment is pegged at around 80 percent with many people in Harare, the capital, eking out a living by selling vegetables and fruits on street corners.Matthew Kapirima, 60, waits outside a busy supermarket for customers to buy his boxes of weather-beaten peaches and litchis for $10 each.But holiday shoppers go about their business without even giving him a second glance.Kapirima has not sold any fruit in days and with a day left before Christmas, he said has to concede that he won’t be able to provide his family with food and new clothes this year. Agencies