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"Conversation. What is it? A Mystery! It's the art of never seeming bored, of touching everything with interest, of pleasing with trifles, of being fascinating with nothing at all. How do we define this lively darting about with words, of hitting them back and forth, this sort of brief smile of ideas which should be conversation?" Guy de Maupassant

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Ethan Zuckerman, has been on holiday to Zimbabwe and has a series of really insightful posts.

My Holiday in Harare :

"I spent less than three days in Zimbabwe, never left Harare and spent almost all my time in the company of different flavors of civil society activists. So I got a very brief and one-sided picture of the country. Still, I learned a lot - most centrally, I learned a little about why people who have the option to leave continue to live in Zimbabwe: itís one of the most beautiful countries Iíve ever been to, and the Zimbabwean people I interacted with are some of the smartest, bravest and friendliest folks Iíve ever met.

Which doesnít mean that Iíll be hurrying back. The ways in which Zimbabwe is broken are deep, profound and would be intolerable to most people around the world. The fact that Zimbabwe continues to exist - that people go to work, to the market, to the bars and cafes - is a tribute to the resilience and flexibility of the Zimbabwean people. Iíd snap, within days or weeks."

You Might Be Having a Currency Crisis IfÖ

"Iíve never seen currency with an expiration date on it before. The bills I carry are, technically, ìBearer Chequesî. They read:ìPay the bearer on demand Twenty Dollars on or before 31st July 2007 for the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Issue date 1st August 2006.î In other words, good luck getting my $20 - (about two and a half US cents at todayís black market rate) after August 2007 - the currency is technically worthless at that point. (Friends tell me that previous currency marked like this has been ìextendedî by legislative act to maintain its worth.)

This currency looks temporary, too. Itís got one ink color (as opposed to the multicolored fantasy of earlier bills) and no security thread. Given how much it costs to print money, how little the bills are worth, and how fast theyíll become worthless, it seems no surprise that a government scrambling to make ends meet might cut some corners in the national mint."

Photos from Zimbabwe - with pictures on Flickr

Reading Between the Lines:

"The effect of suits like the case against VOP is to scare the heck out of anyone who might be tempted to engage in media broadcasting. But innovators are still testing boundaries. Unable to get a license for a community radio station, Radio Dialogue in Bulawayo is creating programming and disseminating it on cassette tapes, which they hand out to the drivers of minibuses. The bus drivers play the tapes on their runs, ìnarrowcastingî to their passengers and avoiding most reasonable definitions of broadcasting. Still, the reach is small and Radio Dialog like others would prefer to reach the airwaves, not just the highways; as their site puts it, ìRadio Dialogue is a non-profit making community radio station aspiring to broadcast to the community of Bulawayo and surrounding areas.î

."........Whatís really going on in Zimbabwe? I donít know. Neither do you. And neither do most Zimbabweans, whether they live at home or abroad. Reading the BBC or CNN wonít help - theyíre not on the ground here either. And like every other situation in Zimbabwe, itís both better and worse than youíve heard."

His last post talks of how the internet is under threat there.  Here's an excerpt: 

"I find it hard to believe that a government which can't pay its bandwidth bill is systematically monitoring the internet communications of half a million people. But threatening to monitor those communications creates a panopticon effect - by telling people they're under observation, many (most?) will behave as if the government's watching. And in a country where transgression can mean indefinite detention and abuse while in custody, it's hard to blame people for wanting no remain firmly on the right side of authority"

Fantastic blogging really as he shares what he loves about the country and his frustrations with the complexities and the unknowns.



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