Has Zimbabwe lost its way?
Stories from New York, China, a philosophical tale from Ireland, and a sobering report on how hopes for Zimbabwe's future are being dashed. With Kate Adie.
When President Emmerson Mnangagwa came to power in Zimbabwe after the end of Robert Mugabe鈥檚 decades-long rule, there was hope that the country could turn a corner. It was supposed to be a fresh start, with better economic management, and fairer politics. But that is not at all how it is turning out, says Andrew Harding who is in neighbouring South Africa.
New York City has been particularly hard-hit by the coronavirus, with 20,000 deaths in the city alone. As Laura Trevelyan reports from Brooklyn, they even needed mobile morgues to cope. Barely had these morgues moved away, when the streets erupted with demonstrations against racism and police brutality in the wake of the killing of George Floyd. It all makes for anxious times, particularly for people of colour.
China was the country where the coronavirus first emerged, and the authorities reacted with strict lockdowns, restricting residents to their homes. But now, as Stephen McDonell reports from Beijing, the worst is behind them, and he was able to return to the Great Wall of China, to enjoy the sunset amid small crowds.
Being under lockdown is not comparable to being a blindfolded hostage, and yet they have something in common. When the mundane world is taken from you, you travel the landscape of the mind and think more. During the lockdown in Ireland, no guests have been allowed to the home. But former hostage Brian Keenan has had unexpected visitors to his garden. They were a fox, an owl and a squirrel, and inspired a philosophical tale about our times.
Presenter: Kate Adie
Producer: Arlene Gregorius
Photo: a Zimbabwe opposition politician in hospital in Harar , where she is one of the three being treated after allegedly being abducted and beaten up by police
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- Sat 6 Jun 2020 11:30大象传媒 Radio 4