Everything about Zimbabwe totally explained
» See also Great Zimbabwe National Monument.:
For information about the March 2008 presidential elections, see this article.
Zimbabwe, officially the
Republic of Zimbabwe, and formerly
Southern Rhodesia, the
Republic of Rhodesia and
Zimbabwe Rhodesia, is a
landlocked country in the southern part of the
continent of
Africa, between the
Zambezi and
Limpopo rivers. It is bordered by
South Africa to the south,
Botswana to the southwest,
Zambia to the northwest, and
Mozambique to the east. The official language of Zimbabwe is
English. However, the majority of the population speaks
Shona, which is the native language of the
Shona people; the other native language of Zimbabwe being
Sindebele, which is spoken by the
Matabele people.
From circa 1250–1629, the area that's known as Zimbabwe today was ruled under the
Mutapa Empire, also known as
Mwene Mutapa,
Monomotapa or
the Empire of Great Zimbabwe, which was renowned for its gold trade routes with
Arabs. However, Portuguese settlers destroyed the trade and began a series of wars which left the empire near collapse in the early 17th century. In 1834, the
Ndebele people arrived while fleeing from the
Zulu leader
Shaka, making the area their new empire,
Matabeleland. In the 1880s, the British arrived with
Cecil Rhodes'
British South Africa Company. In 1898, the name Southern Rhodesia was adopted.
As colonial rule was ending throughout the continent, and as African-majority governments assumed control in neighbouring
Northern Rhodesia and in
Nyasaland, the white-minority Rhodesia government led by
Ian Smith made a
Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI) from the United Kingdom on
11 November 1965. The United Kingdom deemed this an act of rebellion, but didn't re-establish control by force. The white-minority government declared itself a "republic" in 1970. It wasn't recognised by the UK or any other state, other than white minority-led South Africa. A civil war ensued, with
Joshua Nkomo's ZAPU and
Robert Mugabe's ZANU using assistance from the governments of Zambia and Mozambique.
On
18 April 1980, the country attained recognised independence and along with it a new name, Zimbabwe, new flag, and government led by
Robert Mugabe of
ZANU.
Canaan Banana served as the first president with Mugabe as Prime Minister. In 1987, the government amended the Constitution to provide for an Executive President and abolished the office of Prime Minister. The constitutional changes went into effect on
1 January 1988, establishing Robert Mugabe as President.
Under the leadership of
Mugabe, land issues, which the liberation movement promised to solve, reemerged as the vital issue in the 1990s. Beginning in 2000, Mugabe began an effort to redistribute land from white holders (predominantly large farms) to 250,000 Africans.
Zimbabwe is currently experiencing a
hard currency shortage, which has led to
hyperinflation and chronic shortages in imported fuel and consumer goods. Mugabe's critics blame his programme of land reform. However, Mugabe claims that massive financial isolation through American, British and EU legislation such as the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 is the actual cause of hyperinflation. Under ZDERA, the
International Monetary Fund and other financial institutions are prohibited from extending loans, credit or cancelling debt to the government of Zimbabwe. As Zimbabwe needs to import all its energy, and oil is paid for in US dollars, this made the country vulnerable to financial sanctions like ZDERA.
Zimbabwe's current economic and food crisis, described by some observers as the country's worst humanitarian crisis since independence, has been attributed, in varying degrees, to a drought affecting the entire region, the
HIV/
AIDS epidemic, and the government's price controls and land reforms.
Etymology
The name
Zimbabwe derives from "
Dzimba dza mabwe" meaning "great stone house" in the
Shona language. Its use as the country's name is a tribute to
Great Zimbabwe, site of the capital of the
Empire of Great Zimbabwe. In other languages, such as
German, the initial
Z is replaced with an
S so as to produce the same sound in the phonics of the said language; for example
Zimbabwe is spelled "Simbabwe".
History
Pre-colonial era
Stone Age hunters, related to today's
Khoisan people, occupied the area about 5000 years ago or earlier. They depicted scenes of life in rock paintings across Zimbabwe; these are known as the
Bushman paintings.
Iron Age Bantu-speaking peoples began migrating into the area around AD 300, eventually displacing the earlier hunters. These included the ancestors of the
Shona, who account for roughly four-fifths of the country's population today.
By the Middle Ages, there was a Bantu civilization in the region, as evidenced by ruins at
Great Zimbabwe and other smaller sites, whose outstanding achievement is a unique dry stone architecture. Around the early 10th century, trade developed with
Phoenicians on the
Indian Ocean coast, helping to develop Great Zimbabwe in the 11th century. The state traded
gold,
ivory, and
copper for
cloth and
glass. It ceased to be the leading Shona state in the mid-15th century. In 1837-8, the Shona were conquered by the
Ndebele, who arrived from south of the Limpopo and forced them to pay tribute and concentrate in northern Zimbabwe.
Colonial era (1888–1965)
In 1888, British
entrepreneur Cecil Rhodes obtained a concession for
mining rights from
King Lobengula of the Ndebele peoples. Cecil Rhodes presented this concession to persuade the government of the United Kingdom to grant a royal charter to his
British South Africa Company (BSAC) over
Matabeleland, and its subject states such as
Mashonaland. Permission was sought by Rhodes to negotiate similar concessions covering all territory between the
Limpopo River and
Lake Tanganyika, then known as 'Zambesia'. In accordance with the terms of aforementioned concessions and treaties, Cecil Rhodes promoted the colonisation of the region's land, and British hegemony over labour, precious metals and other mineral resources. In 1895 the BSAC adopted the name '
Rhodesia' for the territory of Zambesia, in honor of Cecil Rhodes. In 1898 '
Southern Rhodesia' became the official denotation for the region south of the Zambezi, which later became Zimbabwe. The region to the north was administered separately by the BSAC and later named
Northern Rhodesia, now
Zambia.
The Shona staged unsuccessful revolts (known as
Chimurenga) against encroachment upon their lands, by clients of BSAC and Cecil Rhodes in 1896 and 1897. Following the failed insurrections of 1896-97 the Ndebele and Shona groups became subject to Rhodes' administration thus precipitating European settlement en masse which led to land distribution disproportionately favouring Europeans, displacing the Shona, Ndebele, and other indigenous peoples.
Southern Rhodesia became a
self-governing British colony in October 1923, subsequent to a 1922 referendum. Rhodesians served on behalf of the
United Kingdom during
World War II, mainly in the
East African Campaign against
Axis forces in
Italian East Africa.
In 1953, in the face of African opposition, Britain consolidated the two colonies of Rhodesia with
Nyasaland (now
Malawi) in the ill-fated
Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland which was dominated by Southern Rhodesia. Growing
African nationalism and general dissent, particularly in Nyasaland, admonished Britain to dissolve the Union in 1963, forming three colonies. On
November 11,
1965, Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia
Ian Smith unilaterally declared independence from the United Kingdom. Although Smith's declaration wasn't recognized by the United Kingdom, or any other significant power, Southern Rhodesia dropped the designation 'Southern', and claimed nation-status as the
Republic of Rhodesia in 1970.
UDI and civil war (1965–1979)
After the
Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI), the British government requested
United Nations economic sanctions against
Rhodesia as negotiations with the Smith administration in 1966 and 1968 ended in stalemate. The Smith administration declared itself a
republic in 1970 which was recognised only by
South Africa, then governed by its
apartheid administration. Over the years, the
guerrilla fighting against Smith's UDI government intensified. As a result, the Smith government opened negotiations with the leaders of the Patriotic Fronts —
Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) and the
Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU). ZANU was led by
Robert Mugabe and ZAPU was led by
Joshua Nkomo.
In March 1978, with his regime near the brink of collapse, Smith signed an accord with three black leaders, led by Bishop
Abel Muzorewa, who offered safeguards for white civilians. As a result of the
Internal Settlement,
elections were held in April 1979. The
United African National Council (UANC) party won a majority in this election. On
June 1 1979, the leader of UANC,
Abel Muzorewa, became the country's Prime Minister and the country's name was changed to
Zimbabwe Rhodesia. The internal settlement left control of the country's police, security forces, civil service, and judiciary in white hands. It assured whites of about one third of the seats in parliament. It was essentially a power-sharing arrangement which didn't amount to majority rule. However, on June 12, the
United States Senate voted to end economic sanctions against Zimbabwe Rhodesia.
Following the Meeting of
Commonwealth Heads of Government held in
Lusaka from 1-7 August 1979, the
British government invited Muzorewa and the leaders of the Patriotic Front to participate in a Constitutional Conference at
Lancaster House. The purpose of the Conference was to discuss and reach agreement on the terms of an Independence Constitution, and that elections should be supervised under British authority to enable Rhodesia to proceed to legal independence and the parties to settle their differences by political means.
Lord Carrington,
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs of the United Kingdom, chaired the Conference. The conference took place from
10 September–
15 December 1979 with 47
plenary sessions. On
December 1,
1979, delegations from the British and Rhodesian governments and the Patriotic Front signed the
Lancaster House Agreement, ending the
civil war.
Independence (1980)
Britain's
Lord Soames was appointed governor to oversee the disarming of revolutionary guerrillas, the holding of elections, and the granting of independence to an uneasy coalition government with Joshua Nkomo, head of ZAPU. In the free elections of February 1980, Mugabe and his ZANU won a landslide victory. Mugabe won the re-election.
In 1982,
Joshua Nkomo was ousted from his cabinet, sparking fighting between ZAPU supporters in the Ndebele-speaking region of the country and the ruling ZANU. A peace accord was negotiated in 1987, resulting in ZAPU's merger (1988) into the ZANU-PF.
Decline
Land issues, which the liberation movement promised to solve, re-emerged as the vital issue for the
ruling party beginning in 1999. Despite majority rule, and the existence of a "willing buyer-willing seller" land reform programme since the 1980s, ZANU (PF) claimed that
whites made up less than 1% of the population but held 70% of the country's commercially viable
arable land (though these figures are disputed by many outside the
Government of Zimbabwe). Mugabe began to
redistribute land to blacks in 2000 with a compulsory land redistribution; charges that the programme as a whole is designed to reward loyal Mugabe deputies have persisted in Zimbabwe since the beginning of the process.
The legality and constitutionality of the process has regularly been challenged in the Zimbabwean High and Supreme Courts; however, the
policing agencies have rarely acted in accordance with courts' rulings on these matters. The chaotic implementation of the land reform led to a sharp decline in agricultural exports, traditionally the country's leading export producing sector.
Mining and
tourism have surpassed
agriculture. As a result, Zimbabwe is experiencing a severe hard currency shortage, which has led to
hyperinflation and chronic shortages in imported
fuel and consumer goods. In 2002, Zimbabwe was suspended from the
Commonwealth of Nations on charges of
human rights abuses during the land redistribution and of
election tampering.
Following elections in 2005, the government initiated "
Operation Murambatsvina," a supposed effort to crack down on illegal markets and homes that had seen slums emerge in towns and cities. This action has been widely condemned by opposition and international figures, who charge that it has left a substantial section of urban poor homeless. The Zimbabwe government has described the operation as an attempt to provide decent housing to the population although they've yet to deliver any new housing for the forcefully removed people.
Zimbabwe's current economic and food crisis, described by some observers as the country's worst humanitarian crisis since independence, has been attributed, in varying degrees, to a drought affecting the entire region, the
HIV/
AIDS epidemic, and the government's price controls and land reforms.
Life expectancy at birth for males in Zimbabwe has dramatically declined since 1990 from 60 to 37, the lowest in the world. Life expectancy for females is even lower at 34 years. Concurrently, the infant mortality rate has climbed from 53 to 81 deaths per 1,000 live births in the same period. Currently, 1.8 million Zimbabweans live with HIV.
On
March 29,
2008, Zimbabwe held a presidential election along with a
parliamentary election, The three major candidates were
Robert Mugabe of the
Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF),
Morgan Tsvangirai of the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), and
Simba Makoni, an independent. The results of this
election are still being disputed.
Geography
Zimbabwe is a
landlocked country, surrounded by
South Africa to the south,
Botswana to the west,
Zambia to the northwest and
Mozambique to the east and northeast. Zimbabwe also meets
Namibia to the west at a single point. To the south, Zimbabwe is separated from
South Africa by the
Limpopo River. The north-western border is defined by the
Zambezi River. Zimbabwe's highest peak is
Mount Nyangani (formerly Mount Inyangani), at 2,592 m (8,504 ft); it lies within the
Nyanga National Park in the east of the country. The lowest point of Zimbabwe is the junction of the
Runde and
Save rivers at 162 m (531 ft).
Victoria Falls is a popular tourist destination on the Zambezi.
Zimbabwe's climate is largely tropical, however this is moderated by altitude. It has a short rainy season which lasts about four months between November and March. The terrain of Zimbabwe is mostly high plateau with higher central plateau (high veld) and a mountainous range in the east.
Natural hazards in Zimbabwe include recurring droughts and unpredictable rainfall, though severe storms are rare. There are several environmental issues in Zimbabwe including
deforestation,
soil erosion, land degradation, and air and water
pollution. The
black rhinoceros herd — once the largest concentration of the species in the world — has fallen significantly. Poor mining practices have led to toxic waste and heavy metal pollution. Some of these problems have worsened by the current political crisis, whereby Zimbabweans are cutting down forests for firewood or for sale.
Administrative divisions
Zimbabwe is divided into eight
provinces and two cities with provincial status.
Government and politics
Zimbabwe has a
parliamentary government. Under constitutional changes in 2005, an
upper chamber, the
Senate, was reinstated. The
House of Assembly is the
lower chamber of Parliament.
President
Robert Mugabe's
Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front has been the dominant political party in Zimbabwe since independence. In 1987 then-prime minister Mugabe revised the
constitution and made himself president. His ZANU party has won every election since independence. In particular, the elections of 1990 were nationally and internationally condemned as being rigged, with the second-placed party,
Edgar Tekere's Zimbabwe Unity Movement, winning only 16% of the vote. Presidential elections were again held in 2002 amid allegations of vote-rigging, intimidation and fraud. General elections were held in Zimbabwe on
30 March 2008.
The
Movement for Democratic Change led by
Morgan Tsvangirai is the largest opposition party. The MDC is currently split into two factions. One faction, led by
Welshman Ncube contested the elections to the Senate, while the other, led by Morgan Tsvangirai, opposed to contesting the elections, stating that participation in a rigged election is tantamount to endorsing Mugabe's claim that past elections were free and fair. However, the opposition parties have resumed participation in national and local elections as recently as 2006. The two MDC camps had their congresses in 2005 with
Morgan Tsvangirai being elected to lead the main splinter group which has become more popular than the other group. Mutambara, a robotics professor and former
NASA robotics specialist has replaced
Welshman Ncube who was the interim leader after the split. Morgan Tsvangirai didn't participate in the Senate elections, while the Mutambara faction participated and won five seats in the senate. The Mutambara faction has however been weakened by defections from MPs and individuals who are disillusioned by their manifesto. As of 2007, the Tsvangirai-led MDC has become the most popular, with crowds as large as 20,000 attending their rallies as compared to between 500–5,000 for the other splinter group. There is wide disagreement in Zimbabwe and neighbouring states as to whether a divided MDC can win presidential elections against a disciplined ruling party. The opposition continues to be weak in rural areas, where a large number of the population of Zimbabwe resides.
The
2005 Zimbabwe parliamentary elections were held on March 31 and multiple claims of vote rigging, election fraud and intimidation were made by the MDC and
Jonathan Moyo, calling for investigations into 32 of the 120 constituencies. Jonathan Moyo participated in the elections despite the allegations and won a seat as an independent member of Parliament.
Human rights
There are widespread reports of systematic and escalating violations of human rights in Zimbabwe under the
Mugabe administration and his party,
ZANU-PF.
According to
human rights organisations such as
Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch the government of Zimbabwe violates the rights to shelter, food,
freedom of movement and residence,
freedom of assembly and the
protection of the law. There are assaults on the
media, the
political opposition,
civil society activists, and
human rights defenders.
Opposition gatherings are frequently the subject of brutal attacks by the
police force, such as the crackdown on a
March 11,
2007 Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) rally. In the events, party leader
Morgan Tsvangirai and 49 other opposition activists were arrested and severely beaten by the police. After his release, Morgan Tsvangirai told the
BBC that he suffered head injuries and blows to the arms, knees and back, and that he lost a significant amount of blood. The police action was strongly condemned by the
UN Secretary-General,
Ban Ki-moon, the
European Union and the
United States. the Zimbabwean government-controlled daily newspaper
The Herald claimed the police had intervened after demonstrators "ran amok looting shops, destroying property, mugging civilians, and assaulting police officers and innocent members of the public". The newspaper also argued that the opposition had been "wilfully violating the ban on political rallies". Newspapers critical of the government, such as the
Daily News, closed after bombs exploded at their offices and the government refused to renew their license.
BBC News,
Sky News and
CNN have also been banned from filming or reporting from Zimbabwe. They continue to report on happenings within Zimbabwe from neighbouring countries like South Africa.
Military
The existence of the
Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) is enshrined in the Constitution of Zimbabwe, Chapter X, 96 (1), which states that,
The ZDF was set up by the integration of three belligerent forces, the
Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army, (ZANLA) and the
Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army, (ZIPRA) on one side and the Rhodesian Security Forces (RSF) on the other at the end of the
Liberation Struggle in 1980. The Integration period saw the formation of The
Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) and
Air Force of Zimbabwe (AFZ) as separate entities under the command of Rtd
General Solomon Mujuru and the late Rtd
Air Chief Marshal Josiah Tungamirai respectively. The integration commanders handed over the Zimbabwean flags to then
Lieutenant General Vitalis Zvinavashe, who later became the first Commander Defence Forces (1993), and
Air Marshal Perrance Shiri in 1992, and subsequently in the ZNA to then
Lieutenant General Constantine Chiwenga in 1993.
The approval of the Defence Amendment Bill saw the setting up of a single command for the Defence Forces in 1993. Rtd General Vitalis Zvinavashe became the first commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, with the commanders of both the Army and the Air Force falling under his command. Following his retirement in December 2003, General Constantine Chiwenga, was promoted and appointed Commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. Lieutenant General P. V. Sibanda replaced him as Commander of the Army.
In 1999, the Government of Zimbabwe sent a sizeable military force into the Democratic Republic of
Congo to support the government of President
Laurent Kabila during the
Second Congo War. Those forces were largely withdrawn in 2002.
Zimbabwe National Army
The Zimbabwe National Army or ZNA was created in 1980 from elements of the
Rhodesian Army, integrated to a greater or lesser extent with combatants from the
ZANLA and
ZIPRA guerrilla movements (the armed wings of, respectively,
ZANU and
ZAPU).
Following majority rule in early 1980,
British Army trainers oversaw the integration of guerrilla fighters into a
battalion structure overlaid on the existing Rhodesian armed forces. For the first year a system was followed where the top-performing candidate became battalion commander. If he or she was from ZANLA, then his or her second-in-command was the top-performing ZIPRA candidate, and vice versa. This ensured a balance between the two movements in the command structure. From early 1981 this system was abandoned in favour of political appointments, and
ZANLA/
ZANU fighters consequently quickly formed the majority of battalion commanders in the ZNA.
The ZNA was originally formed into four
brigades, composed of a total of 29 battalions. The brigade support units were composed almost entirely of specialists of the former Rhodesian Army, while unintegrated battalions of the
Rhodesian African Rifles were assigned to the 1st, 3rd and 4th Brigades. The notorious
Fifth Brigade was formed in 1981 and disbanded in 1984 after allegations of brutality and murder during the Brigade's occupation of
Matabeleland in what has become known as
Gukurahundi (
Shona: "the early rain which washes away the chaff before the spring rains").
Economy
The government of Zimbabwe faces a variety of economic problems after having abandoned earlier efforts to develop a market-oriented economy. Problems include a shortage of
foreign exchange, soaring inflation, and supply shortages. Zimbabwe's involvement from 1998 to 2002 in the war in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo drained hundreds of millions of dollars from the economy.
Mineral exports, agriculture, and tourism are the main foreign currency earners of Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe is the biggest trading partner of South Africa on the continent. The downward spiral of the economy has been attributed mainly to mismanagement and corruption of the Mugabe regime and the eviction of more than 4,000 white farmers in the controversial land redistribution of 2000. Since this land redistribution began, agricultural exports, especially tobacco, have declined sharply. The Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force released a report in June 2007, estimating 60% of Zimbabwe's wildlife has died since 2000. The report warns that the loss of life combined with widespread deforestation is potentially disastrous for the tourist industry.
Inflation rose from an annual rate of 32% in 1998 to an official estimated high of 100,580.2% in January 2008, a state of
hyperinflation. Local residents have largely resorted to buying essentials from neighbouring
Botswana,
South Africa and
Zambia. IMF economists estimated inflation at about 150,000% in Dec 2007.
In 2005, the government, led by central bank governor
Gideon Gono, started making overtures that white farmers could come back. There were 400 to 500 still left in the country, but much of the land that had been confiscated was no longer productive. In January 2007, the government even let some white farmers sign long term leases. But, the government reversed course again and started demanding that all remaining white farmers leave the country or face jail.
In August 2006, a new revalued Zimbabwean dollar was introduced, equal to 1000 of the prior Zimbabwean. The exchange rate fell from 24 old
Zimbabwean dollars per
U.S. dollar (USD) in 1998 to 250,000 prior or 250 new Zimbabwean dollars per USD at the official rate, and an estimated 120,000,000 old or 120,000 revalued Zimbabwean dollars per US dollar on the parallel market, in June 2007.
On
June 21,
2007, the U.S. ambassador to Zimbabwe,
Christopher Dell, told
The Guardian newspaper that inflation could reach 1.5 million per cent (1,500,000%) by the end of the year. The current official inflation rate is above 26,000% and the black-market exchange rate is Z$3,650,000 to the
pound. On
July 13, 2007, the Zimbabwe government said it had temporarily stopped publishing (official) inflation figures, a move that observers said was meant to draw attention away from runaway inflation which has come to symbolize the country's unprecedented economic meltdown.
Mugabe points to foreign governments and alleged "sabotage" as the cause of the fall of the Zimbabwean economy, as well as the country's 80% formal unemployment rate. Critics of Mugabe's administration, including the majority of the international community, blame Mugabe's controversial programme which sought to seize land from white commercial farmers. Mugabe has repeatedly blamed sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe by the
European Union and the United States for the state of the Zimbabwean economy. However, these sanctions only target government officials and not ordinary citizens. In a recent meeting of the
Southern African Development Community, a call was issued for the sanctions to be removed. It should be noted that Rhodesia had a successful export-led economy despite harsh sanctions applied to the whole nation by the UK and other world powers.
Demographics
According to the
United Nations World Health Organization, the life expectancy for men is 37 years and the life expectancy for women is 34 years of age, the lowest in the world in 2006. An association of doctors in Zimbabwe have made calls for President Mugabe to make moves to assist the ailing health service.
Zimbabwe has a very high
HIV infection rate. In 2006, the HIV rate was estimated to be 20.1% for people aged 15–49.
UNESCO reported a decline in HIV prevalence among pregnant women from 26% in 2002 to 21% in 2004. Zimbabwe's total population is 12 million.
English is the official
language of Zimbabwe, though less than 2.5%, mainly the white and
Coloured (mixed race) minorities, consider it their native language. The rest of the population speak
Shona (76%) and
Ndebele (18%). Shona has a rich oral tradition, which was incorporated into the first Shona novel,
Feso by
Solomon Mutswairo, published in 1956. English is spoken primarily in the cities, but less so in rural areas. Radio and television news is now broadcast in English, Ndebele, and Shona.
Sixty two percent of Zimbabweans attend
Christian churches. The largest Christian churches are
Anglican,
Roman Catholic,
Seventh-day Adventist and
Methodist. However like most former European
colonies, Christianity is often mixed with enduring traditional beliefs. Besides Christianity,
ancestral worship is the most practiced non-Christian
religion which involves ancestor worship and
spiritual intercession; the Mbira Dza Vadzimu, which means "Voice of the Ancestors", an instrument related to many
lamellophones ubiquitous throughout Africa, is central to many ceremonial proceedings. Mwari simply means "God the Creator" (musika vanhu in Shona). Around 1% of the population is
Muslim.
Black ethnic groups make up 98% of the population. The majority people, the
Shona, comprise 80 to 84%. The
Ndebele are the second most populous with 10 to 15% of the population. The Ndebele are descended from
Zulu migrations in the nineteenth century and the other tribes with which they intermarried. Support for the opposition is particularly strong both from the Ndebele and the Shona majority. Up to one million Ndebele may have left the country over the last five years, mainly for South Africa.
Bantus of other ethnicities are the third largest with 2 to 5%. Most emigration has been to the UK, South Africa, Botswana, Zambia,
Australia and
New Zealand.
Mixed race citizens are 0.5% and various Asian ethnic groups, mostly of
Indian and
Chinese origin, are also 0.5%.
Asian immigrants are influential in the economic sector.
Refugee crisis
The economic meltdown and repressive political measures in Zimbabwe has led to a flood of refugees into neighbouring countries. An estimated 3.4 million Zimbabweans, a quarter of the population, had fled abroad by mid 2007. Some 3 million of these have gone to South Africa.
Apart from the people who fled into the neighbouring countries, an estimated 570,000 people are displaced within the borders of the country, many of whom remain in transit camps and have limited access to assistance. Most of the displaced have been victims of the
Operation Murambatsvina in the year 2005 and continuing evictions and violent farm seizures. Their plight is virtually impossible to assess, as there has been no national survey of people displaced since 2005.
However, these numbers are not solid, and are likely greatly exaggerated, as a study by the Forced Migration Studies Program of Witwatersrand University finds.
Education
Zimbabwe has an
adult literacy rate of approximately 90% which is amongst the highest in Africa. However, since 1995 the adult literacy rate of Zimbabwe has steadily decreased which is a trend shared by other African countries.
The majority of the wealthier portion of the population send their children to
independent schools as opposed to the
government-run schools which are attended by the poorer members of the black population as these have lower fee scales. School education was made free in 1980, but since 1988, the government has steadily increased the charges attached to school enrollment until they now greatly exceed the real value of fees in 1980. The Ministry of Education of Zimbabwe maintains and operates the government schools but the fees charged by independent schools are regulated by the cabinet of Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe's education system consists of 7 years of primary and 6 years of secondary schooling before students can enter university in country or abroad. The academic year in Zimbabwe runs from January to December, with three month terms, broken up by one month holidays, with a total of 40 weeks of school per year. National examinations are written during the third term in November, with
"O" level and
"A" level subjects also offered in June.
There are seven public universities as well as four church-related universities in Zimbabwe that are fully internationally accredited.
Culture and recreation
Zimbabwe celebrates its independence on
April 18,
1980. Celebrations are held at the
National Sports Stadium in Harare where the first independence celebrations were held in 1980. At these celebrations doves are released to symbolise peace and fighter jets fly over and the
national anthem is sung. The flame of independence is lit by the president after parades by the presidential family and members of the armed forces of Zimbabwe. The president also gives a speech to the people of Zimbabwe which is televised for those unable to attend the stadium.
Football and
cricket are the most popular sports in Zimbabwe. The citizens of Zimbabwe have won four medals in the
Olympic Games, one in field hockey at the
1980 Summer games in
Moscow, and three in swimming at the
2004 Summer games in
Athens.
Zimbabwe has also done well in the
Commonwealth Games and
All-Africa Games in
swimming with
Kirsty Coventry obtaining 11 gold medals in the different competitions.
Zimbabwe has also competed at
Wimbledon and the
Davis Cup in tennis, most notably with the Black Family, which comprises
Wayne Black,
Byron Black and
Cara Black.
Traditional arts in Zimbabwe include
pottery, basketry,
textiles,
jewellery, and
carving. Among the distinctive qualities are
symmetrically patterned woven baskets and stools carved out of a single piece of wood. Shona
sculpture has become world famous in recent years having first emerged in the 1940s. Most subjects of
carved figures of stylised birds and human figures among others are made with
sedimentary rocks such as
soapstone, as well as harder
igneous rocks such as
serpentine and the rare stone
verdite. Shona
sculpture in essence has been a fusion of African folklore with
European influences. Internationally famous artists include Henry Mudzengerere and Nicolas Mukomeranwa. A recurring theme in Zimbabwean art is the
metamorphosis of man into beast. Zimbabwean musicians like
Thomas Mapfumo,
Oliver Mutukudzi, the
Bhundu Boys and
Audius Mtawarira have achieved international recognition.
Several authors are well known within Zimbabwe and abroad.
Charles Mungoshi is renowned in Zimbabwe for writing traditional stories in English and in Shona and his poems and books have sold well with both the black and white communities.
Catherine Buckle has achieved international recognition with her two books
African Tears and
Beyond Tears which tell of the ordeal she went through under the 2000
Land Reform.
Prime Minister of Rhodesia, the late
Ian Smith, has also written two books
— The Great Betrayal and
Bitter Harvest. The book
The House of Hunger by
Dambudzo Marechera won an award in the UK in 1979 and the Nobel Prize-winning author
Doris Lessing's first novel
The Grass Is Singing is set in Rhodesia.
Food
Like many other Africans, a majority of Zimbabweans depend on a few staple foods. "Mealie meal" (
cornmeal) is used to prepare
bota, a
porridge made by mixing the cornmeal with water to produce a thick paste. This is usually flavoured with
peanut butter,
milk,
butter, or, sometimes,
jam.
Bota is usually eaten for breakfast. Cornmeal is also used to make
sadza, which is usually eaten for dinner, and by many for lunch as well. Sadza is prepared similarly to bota. However, after the paste has been cooking for several minutes, more cornmeal is added to thicken the paste. This meal is usually served with greens, (
spinach,
collard greens), beans, and meat that has been stewed, grilled, or roasted. Sadza is also commonly eaten with
curdled milk, commonly known as lacto (mukaka wakakora), or a small dried fish called kapenta (matemba). On special occasions, rice and
chicken with cabbage salad is served as the main meal.
Graduations, weddings, and any other family gatherings will usually be celebrated with the killing of a
goat or
cow, which will be
braaied (an
Afrikaner form of
barbecue) for the family.
Afrikaner recipes are popular though they're a small group (0.2%) within the white minority group. Meat, beef and to a lesser extent chicken are especially popular, though consumption has declined under the Mugabe regime due to falling incomes.
Biltong, a type of
jerky, is a popular snack, prepared by hanging bits of spiced raw meat to dry in the shade.
Boerewors (— "Boo-ruh-vorse") is served with sadza. It is a long sausage, often well-spiced, composed of beef rather than pork, and barbecued.
Birthplace of Scouting
It was in Matabeleland during the
First Chimurenga that
Baden-Powell, the
Founder of Scouting, and
Frederick Russell Burnham, the
Father of Scouting, first met and began their life-long friendship. In mid-June 1896, during a scouting patrol in
Matobo Hills, Burnham taught Baden-Powell
woodcraft, the fundamentals of
Scouting. Practiced by frontiersmen of the
American Old West and
indigenous peoples of North America, woodcraft was generally unknown to the British. However, Baden-Powell recognized that wars in Africa were changing markedly and the British Army needed to adapt; so during their joint scouting missions, Baden-Powell and Burnham discussed the concept of a broad training program in woodcraft for young men, rich in
exploration,
tracking,
fieldcraft, and self-reliance. Later, Baden-Powell wrote a number of books on the subject, and even started to train and make use of adolescent boys, most famously during the
Siege of Mafeking, during the
Second Boer War.
Tourism
Since the Land Reform programme in 2000, tourism in Zimbabwe has steadily declined. After rising during the 1990s, (1.4 million tourists in 1999) industry figures described a 75% fall in visitors to Zimbabwe in 2000. By December, less than 20% of hotel rooms had been occupied. This has had a huge impact on the Zimbabwean economy. Thousands of jobs have been lost in the industry due to companies closing down or simply being unable to pay staff wages due to the decreasing number of tourists.
Several airlines have also pulled out of Zimbabwe.
Australia's
Qantas,
Germany's
Lufthansa and
Austrian Airlines were among the first to pull out and most recently
British Airways suspended all direct flights to Harare. The country's flagship airline
Air Zimbabwe still flies to the United Kingdom.
Zimbabwe boasts several major tourist attractions.
Victoria Falls on the
Zambezi River, which are shared with Zambia, are located in the north west of Zimbabwe. Before the economic changes, much of the tourism for these locations came to the Zimbabwe side but now Zambia is the main beneficiary. The
Victoria Falls National Park is also in this area and is one of the eight main National Parks in Zimbabwe, largest of which is
Hwange National Park.
The
Eastern Highlands are a series of mountainous areas near the border with Mozambique. The highest peak in Zimbabwe,
Mount Nyangani at 2,593 m (8,507 ft) is located here as well as the
Bvumba Mountains and the
Nyanga National Park.
World's View is in these mountains and it's from here that places as far away as 60–70 km (37–43 mi) are visible and, on clear days, the town of
Rusape can be seen.
Zimbabwe is unusual in Africa in that there are a number of ancient ruined cities built in a unique dry stone style. The most famous of these are the
Great Zimbabwe ruins in
Masvingo, which have survived from the
Monomotapa Empire. Other ruins include
Khami Ruins, Zimbabwe,
Dhlo-Dhlo and
Naletale, although none of these is as famous as Great Zimbabwe.
The
Matobo Hills are an area of
granite kopjes and wooded valleys commencing some 35 kilometres south of
Bulawayo, southern Zimbabwe. The Hills were formed over 2000 million years ago with granite being forced to the surface, then being eroded to produce smooth "whaleback dwalas" and broken kopjes, strewn with boulders and interspersed with thickets of vegetation.
Mzilikazi, founder of the
Ndebele nation, gave the area its name, meaning 'Bald Heads'. They have become famous and a tourist attraction due to their ancient shapes and local wildlife.
Cecil John Rhodes and other early white pioneers like
Leander Starr Jameson are buried in these hills at a site named World's View.
National symbols, insignia and anthems
The two main traditional symbols of Zimbabwe are the
Zimbabwe Bird and the
Balancing Rocks.
Other
national symbols exist, but have varying degrees of official usage, such as the
flame lily and the
Sable Antelope.
Zimbabwe Bird
The stone-carved Zimbabwe Bird appears on the national flags and coats of arms of both Zimbabwe and
Rhodesia, as well as on
banknotes and coins (first on
Rhodesian pound and then
Rhodesian dollar). It probably represents the
bateleur eagle.
The famous
soapstone bird carvings stood on walls and monoliths of the ancient city of
Great Zimbabwe built, it's believed, sometime between the 12th and 15th centuries by ancestors of the
Shona. The ruins, which gave their name to modern Zimbabwe, cover some 1,800 acres (7.3 km²) and are the largest ancient stone construction in Zimbabwe.
When the ruins of Great Zimbabwe were excavated by treasure-hunters in the late nineteenth century, five of the carved birds they discovered were taken to
South Africa by
Cecil Rhodes. Four of the statues were returned to Zimbabwe by the South African government at independence, while the fifth remains at
Groote Schuur, Rhodes' former home in
Cape Town.
Balancing Rocks
Balancing Rocks are geological formations all over Zimbabwe. They are rocks perfectly balanced without other supports caused by the erosion of softer rock around an ancient granite intrusion that gets left exposed. They are often remarked on and have been depicted on both the
paper money of the Zimbabwean dollar and the
paper money of the Rhodesian dollar. The ones found on the current notes of Zimbabwe, named the Banknote Rocks, are located in
Epworth, approximately 15 km (9.3 mi) south-east of Harare. There are, however, many different formations of the rocks, incorporating single and paired columns of 3 or more rocks. These formations are a feature of south and east tropical Africa from northern South Africa northwards to Sudan. The most notable formations in Zimbabwe are located in the
Matobo National Park in Matabeleland.
National anthem
"
Blessed be the Land of Zimbabwe" (; ) is the
national anthem of Zimbabwe. It was introduced in March 1994 after a nation-wide competition to replace "" as a distinctly Zimbabwean song. The winning entry was a song written by Professor
Solomon Mutswairo and composed by
Fred Changundega. It has been translated into all three of the main languages of Zimbabwe.
Image:Zimbabwe cent.png|Reverse side of the defunct ten cent coin featuring the Zimbabwe Bird
Image:Zimbabwe Bird.svg|Traditional Zimbabwe Bird design
Image:Balancing Rocks.jpg|An example of Balancing Rocks in Epworth
Image:Gloriosa rothschildiana 01.jpg|The Flame Lily, national flower of Zimbabwe
Further Information
Get more info on 'Zimbabwe'.
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