The Latest in Zimbabwe
Water is available on only two  days a week, coming on at about 5pm, and going off again at about 10am the next  morning. 
Electricity cuts are scheduled for  6 out of 7 days – usually for between 3 to 6 hours a time. 
The occasions when you have both  water and electricity are therefore rare, and are normally during the night-time  hours, so those are the times when you are able to put on a washing machine  load, or have a hot shower. People have reorganised their lives around these  things, getting up at 2 in the morning to put a load into the washing machine,  or to fill up their water containers. You do things when you are able to: having  a hot shower, even having a 'bucket-shower' if you want hot water, flushing the  toilet, cooking your main meal, filling thermos flasks with hot water for tea.  For a single person, or a couple where both are working full-time, life must be  a nightmare, as you simply don't have the flexibility to do all these basic  things when you need to. 
The supermarkets are empty –  shelves quite simply have nothing at all on them. The few products that are left  (mainly cleaning materials, local wines, olive oil, some jams…) are spaced out  on the shelves to give a vague illusion of plenty. There is no meat, no milk, no  cheese, no mealie meal, no bread, no flour, no rice, no pasta…. The large  commercial fridges are empty. 
Other shops have less and less for  sale; or they have 'diversified' – a baker's shop which used to have iced cakes  in the window, now has toiletries and hair dyes in their place!  
The informal traders have some of  the local seasonal fruit and veg, but only in small quantities. Many things are  sourced by word of mouth, by just being in the right place at the right time.  One man I know was in Mweb (an ISP), and a customer was telling his friend  behind the counter that so-and-so had chickens available; he asked if he could  get one too…! Someone comes into work and says that a certain shop has pork… and  everyone rushes out to try and get some. 
I was offered 6 eggs, and my very  generous friend gave me 10 instead. I intended to give the extra 4 to my  domestic but then, as I drove into the supermarket, on impulse I asked the car  park attendant if he would like an egg! He was chuffed (and my domestic only got  3 instead of 4)! In what normal society does this happen? 
In ordinary society, if you are  invited to friends for dinner, you might take a bottle of wine, or some flowers,  or even some chocolate. There, you take some pasta and a tin of tuna – people  have so little food (even if they have money to buy it, there is none available)  that just one extra mouth to feed is a problem. 
Fuel is pretty much unavailable,  unless you have access to foreign currency (forex), and even then, it is very  difficult to source. You buy when you can, and if you don't have, you go  without. The roads – particularly outside the towns – are noticeably emptier.  However the road-worthiness of the cars still going is worse than ever – car  parts or new tyres are a luxury which people can't afford or can't obtain, or  both. 
Some fortunate middle-class people  have 'made a plan': buying 5000 litre water containers, and rigging them up in  their back yards, either filling them when the water comes out of the mains, or  filling them from bowsers which in turn have been filled from properties with  boreholes. Some people have bought generators (but you still need the petrol or  diesel to run them). A number of people cross the border to 
Poorer people just don't eat, it  seems. The World Health Organisation calculated the average life expectancy for  women to be 34 years, and 37 years for men. This is the data for 2004. With the  combination of AIDS, poverty and malnutrition, this figure is surely much lower  now in 2007.   
The level of hardship is  unbelievable. Churches, while still preaching the Gospel, are mostly now  concerned with meeting humanitarian needs. 
My overall impression was that  people are putting their heads down and focussing on day-to-day survival, as is  to be expected. What continues to surprise me, though, is the amazing resilience  of people: the ability to talk and empathise with a complete stranger in a  supermarket, the sudden smile which breaks over someone's face as you greet them  – friend or stranger, the little (and large) kindnesses among so much hardship.  
I know that many people in many  countries have to deal with such problems on a daily basis, but the sad thing is  that Zim just wasn't like that 10 years ago, and things have gone downhill  progressively since then. Please pray for 




