Jag läser den här notisen, från TT-AFP, som SvD publicerat och jag undrar vad nyheten är. Vi får veta att Zimbabwe bekämpar inflationen (den sägs vara 5000 procent årligen, men jag förmodar att det är på årsbasis), att kampen förs genom att staten den 26 juni beordrade halverade priser, att statlig media rapporterar att det gått jättebra och att Zimbabwe en gång varit en brittisk koloni och hetat Rhodesia.
En mer intressant artikel finns hos The Guardian, författad av deras korrespondent i Harare.
Zimbabweans are shopping like there’s no tomorrow. With police patrolling the aisles of Harare’s electrical shops to enforce massive government-ordered price cuts, the widescreen TVs were the first things to go, for as little as £20. Across the country, shoes, clothes, toiletries and different kinds of food were all swept from the shelves as a nation with the world’s fastest shrinking economy gorged itself on one last spending spree.
Car dealers said officials were trying to force them to sell vehicles at the official exchange rate, effectively meaning that a car costing £15,000 could be had for £30 by changing money on the blackmarket. The owners of several dealerships have been arrested.
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The impact of the price cuts was felt almost immediately as fuel virtually disappeared from sale after garages were forced to sell petrol for 23p a litre, less than they paid the state-owned supplier.
The police and army broke the locks on petrol pumps at some garages and tanks ran dry amid panic buying. Now petrol is available only on the blackmarket, at more than seven times the official price and three times what garages had been charging. By Saturday, most minibus taxis had gone from the roads because drivers could not find petrol. Crowds of workers were left on kerbs for hours trying to get to or from their jobs.
The riot police had to be called out to the South African-owned Makro super store in Harare after thousands of people stormed the shop after it was forced to slash prices. The scenes were replicated in stores throughout Harare. The Bata shoe chain’s shops were stripped bare in two days by people snapping up pairs for as little as 20p.
Food is still available, although bread, sugar, cornmeal and other staples are hard to find, and meat has all but disappeared because livestock owners say it is now uneconomic to slaughter their animals. Much of the meat that is available is goat slaughtered in backyards and sold in informal markets.
The rest of the food supply – already severely undermined by drought and lack of production on land seized from white farmers – is also under threat after Mr Mugabe threatened to take over manufacturers if they shut down their plants on the grounds that they were uneconomic. ”Factories must produce. If they don’t, we will take you over … We will seize the factories,” he said.
Nåja, nu är det väl det ingen jätteöverraskning direkt. Men att enbart rapportera att den statliga median säger att resultaten imponerar är mer än lovligt naivt.