Kwa sababu ya kuwa issue yenywe ni International, naamini kuwa kutakuwa na posters au observers ambao wangetaka kujua about this special relationship between Zimbabwe and Tanzania...jana jioni kwenye Channel 4 news JOHN SNOW aliamua ku go all out on Mugabe during his press conference with JK.
Now lets talk about Zimbabwe, land reforms and how our close relationship with them can harm our "other" close relationship with the British government
discuss
To be honest, whatever that relationship is (labda ueleze mkuu), it wont be affected. Peeps do business in their interest (especially wazungus, I wish we would do the same for national interests). Check this link;
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2000349,00.html
Barclays is a british insitution doing business in Zimbabwe. If the British had issues with doing business with Zimbabwe, they could in theory pressure the likes of Barclays. The British/Americans/Europeans (IMF/World Bank) could be passing money to S.A (or even Tanzania...hahaaa, who knows), then Zimbabwe takes a loan from S.A......in reality its business as usual. At the end of the day, with Zim in a mess, those working with Zim at the moment, could have the last laugh in the long run when Zim starts rebuilding. Wazungu wakitaka kumtoa Mugabe, potentially wanaweza, issue ni kwanini hawajafanya? Perhaps wakifanya hivyo nchi nyingi za kiafrika zitakuja juu? We huoni nchi za kiafrika zimetulia kuhusu Zimbabwe?
And as things go, wazungus are becoming more cautious in dealing with african countries, cos there is China as competition.
Amazing though the punchlines Mugabe comes up with. Hebu read the sarcasm on this;
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=300616&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
"We don't have to go to IMF for that, even to any European donor, for what we can do between and amongst ourselves," Mugabe told a business meeting organised in Windhoek by the Namibian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
"And when we start doing it on our own, you'll see them coming, saying 'Ah, you have a factory here. We want to assist you.' Then, if we want a partner, the partner must come on our terms, because then we will have the capacity to do things on our own."
"When we don't have that capacity,
then we are like economic slaves. We go begging. There are still countries in Africa which go begging for money in order to pay their civil servants, and they got independent in the '60s," he said.
Mmhh, mi chichemi, nachoma tu!!