No laughing matter

via No laughing matter – ANGUS SHAW October 6, 2015

Much as Zimbabwe’s ability to laugh at itself is to be applauded, the lighter side of the 18- hour 4.00 a.m. to 10.00 p.m. power cuts isn’t a laughing matter any longer.

The neighbour’s young daughter gets up in the dark to get ready for work and comes home to darkness, father goes to the bar up the road and there is unholy kuk in the family when he returns by 10.00 p.m. to catch up on a bit of television before falling asleep in his armchair.

The local satellite TV provider is inundated with subscribers demanding rebates for providing six hours of broadcasts only in the middle of the night. Our programming is 24/7; your electricity isn’t our problem, it tells them.

People are queuing with containers at petrol stations for fuel for generators and LP gas. Children carry smaller gas canisters on their heads. The whistling camping kettle is selling well to save gas by switching it off as soon as the water boils.

‘Keep Calm. Be Zimbabwean and Make a Plan,’ says Paola Thompson’s photo of a sign typical of the country’s history of resilience to crisis. But what if there is no money to make that plan? Few can afford upwards of $10 dollars a day for diesel and another $80 for a generator service after 300 hours of runtime. Without a bank of expensive back up batteries, the standard battery on a solar powered inverter won’t last more than about 12 hours.

Whoever it was who once said Africa will survive any future nuclear holocaust because many inhabitants already live in post-holocaust conditions of destruction and deprivation was laughed at.

Question: What did Zimbabwe use before candles? Answer: Electricity.

A selfie by the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority

Not funny any more.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 4
  • comment-avatar

    We have been doing this since 1965 !!That far back– huh!! But it was always said there was a light at the end of the tunnel– now with no ZESA –I don’t know man!!!

    • comment-avatar
      Ring Master 9 years ago

      We are shrugging off the civilisation imposed on us by the colonialists. No electricity, no commercial farming, no school, no hospitals. Thats independence!!

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    machakachaka 9 years ago

    We can now re-live the life experienced by our ancestors lived during the stone age. We don’t need history books and story-telling by our old folks. We are living in history now. But having been used to electricity for a while, I doubt we are going to adapt. Our ancestors never experienced electricity so to them a life without power was perfect. I wish we had never had electricity in the first place.

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    Mazano Rewayi 9 years ago

    Yet, as in the Titanic, the band keeps on playing! Only difference is that for the Titanic it was bravery for Zim it is madness.