Things have worked out rather differently for the two states, although one thing the varying experiences may demonstrate is the advantage of having land reform issues worked out before populist post-independence politics can make a hash of it. At independence, Zimbabwe was a state where 4500 white farmers controlled 70 percent of the land.
By coincidence, the Times also runs an obituary for an only-in-Africa character: Ian Harvey, who served in the air forces of colonial Rhodesia, Ian Smith, and of Zimbabwe, becoming Mugabe's personal helicopter pilot and then living the arc of most Zimbabweans recently, taking a menial job out of retirement to supplement his pension, which was eroded by hyperinflation.
As the weekend showed, the Republic chose to commemorate an uprising and not any of the formal anniversaries of its status, such as today's. Given the current trajectory of the process that began in 1980, a post-Mugabe Zimbabwe may do likewise.
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