South African leader Helen Zille offers a fresh perspective on Zimbabwe's troubles. She points to how the country dealt with its past after British rule ended.
Zimbabwe gained freedom in 1980. The land once fed much of Africa, but today, its people face hard times. Many blame quick farm changes around the year 2000 for this fall.
Zille leads South Africa's Democratic Alliance party. She sees good and bad marks from colonial times. Schools, health care, and power plants came from that era, she notes. "Should we throw these away just to break from the past?" she asks.
She compared Zimbabwe with Singapore, another former British colony. Both started free life at similar times. Singapore grew rich. Zimbabwe fell into trade with goats and cattle.
The United States put limits on Zimbabwe's trade. Leaders in Zimbabwe say these rules hurt their money system. Prices keep rising. The local cash loses worth.
Zille said Singapore kept its old systems and improved them. Zimbabwe took a different approach. "They could have built on what they got, even if much of it came from bad times," she added.
The words shine light on hard questions. How should a free land use what others left behind? The answer shapes the lives of millions of people today.
Zimbabwe gained freedom in 1980. The land once fed much of Africa, but today, its people face hard times. Many blame quick farm changes around the year 2000 for this fall.
Zille leads South Africa's Democratic Alliance party. She sees good and bad marks from colonial times. Schools, health care, and power plants came from that era, she notes. "Should we throw these away just to break from the past?" she asks.
She compared Zimbabwe with Singapore, another former British colony. Both started free life at similar times. Singapore grew rich. Zimbabwe fell into trade with goats and cattle.
The United States put limits on Zimbabwe's trade. Leaders in Zimbabwe say these rules hurt their money system. Prices keep rising. The local cash loses worth.
Zille said Singapore kept its old systems and improved them. Zimbabwe took a different approach. "They could have built on what they got, even if much of it came from bad times," she added.
The words shine light on hard questions. How should a free land use what others left behind? The answer shapes the lives of millions of people today.