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Zimbabwe's Rickety Trains Get A Boost From Expat Investors Next Door

Passengers disembark from a train in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.
Claire Harbage
/
NPR
Passengers disembark from a train in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.

On a recent Friday afternoon, 30-year-old Sidumiso Nyoni took the train from her home in rural Nyamandhlovu, Zimbabwe, to the industrial city of Bulawayo to visit family. It's a distance of only 25 miles, but she says the roads are in such bad shape that the train is the only option. The ride isn't long, but the schedule is completely unpredictable.

"The train doesn't have a specific time at which it comes," she says. Sometimes she says she'll arrive at the station for a 7 a.m. train and "it ends up spoiling the rest of your day, because the train comes in the afternoon."

Sidumiso Nyoni, 30, took the train from her home in rural Nyamandhlovu, Zimbabwe, to the industrial city of Bulawayo to visit family. "The train doesn't have a specific time at which it comes," she says.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
Sidumiso Nyoni, 30, took the train from her home in rural Nyamandhlovu, Zimbabwe, to the industrial city of Bulawayo to visit family. "The train doesn't have a specific time at which it comes," she says.

There's an apocryphal quip about Italy's ruthless dictator Benito Mussolini: "At least Mussolini made the trains run on time."

That dubious maxim does not apply to Zimbabwe former authoritarian leader Robert Mugabe. Under Mugabe, who ruled the country from 1980 until last November, the trains were emphatically not on time. The railway system was a symptom of the broader collapse of the country's economy.

A network that in the late 1990s moved 18 million tons of coal, precious metals, agricultural goods and other freight a year at its peak moved about 3 million tons in 2016, according to the state-run National Railways of Zimbabwe. These days, instead of a modern signaling system, train conductors communicate by radio or even using the smartphone messaging app WhatsApp. National Railways of Zimbabwe spokesman Nyasha Maravanyika says that can leave one train waiting an hour for another to pass.

National Railways of Zimbabwe spokesman Nyasha Maravanyika stands in the Bulawayo train station.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
National Railways of Zimbabwe spokesman Nyasha Maravanyika stands in the Bulawayo train station.

There's a new plan in the works to get the rail system back up to snuff, with a $400 million investment, led by a group of Zimbabwean expat investors living in South Africa. It is being touted by Emmerson Mnangagwa, who replaced Mugabe as president with the military's backing, as an example of the investment his "open for business" policies will attract. If successful, it will be one small part of a broad array of interventions needed to revive the country's economy. That is the key challenge facing whoever wins Zimbabwe's presidential election on Monday.

Mugabe's government wreaked havoc on the Zimbabwean economy. Now, Mugabe is gone, but the economy — and key infrastructure like the railways — is still in a perilous state.

"It is a huge challenge," says Gene Leon, mission chief for Zimbabwe at the International Monetary Fund. "We should not underestimate it."

The front entrance to the Bulawayo train station.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
The front entrance to the Bulawayo train station.

The IMF and the World Bank have identified reforming state-owned enterprises like the national railways as a key area of financial reform for Zimbabwe. Many have operated at a loss, and they've been a drag on the state's budget.

"We need to privatize what can be privatized, commercialize those that can be commercialized," says Prosper Chitambara, a Zimbabwean economist who focuses on development.

He says Zimbabwe's outreach efforts to international investors have produced interest but not much investment yet.

"We are in desperate need of capital, yet foreign business is not yet prepared to invest in this kind of environment, where there are uncertainties, where there is the risk of instability."

The National Railways of Zimbabwe system map hangs in the office at the Bulawayo station.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
The National Railways of Zimbabwe system map hangs in the office at the Bulawayo station.

The need for international investment has caught on among at least one key group: Zimbabweans abroad.

Take Donovan Chimhandamba. Born in Zimbabwe, he moved to South Africa at age 22 after graduating university and worked in engineering before moving into finance.

Now he's the executive chairman of the Diaspora Infrastructure Development Group.

Donovan Chimhandamba, a Zimbabwean expat, is now the executive chairman of the Diaspora Infrastructure Development Group.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
Donovan Chimhandamba, a Zimbabwean expat, is now the executive chairman of the Diaspora Infrastructure Development Group.

Last year, in partnership with the South African rail company Transnet, the group won a bid to recapitalize Zimbabwe's railway.

The first phase, being finalized now, will put $400 million into the system. Chimhandamba says that will go to basic investments to start to rebuild capacity — more trains, fixing damaged track, improving the signaling systems for how trains communicate, even electric lighting at trainyards.

"You walk into some of these yards they're like graveyards," says Chimhandamba. The plan is that this will get the system's capacity up to 8 million tons a year — more than double its current level, but still far short of its peak in the late 1990s. The National Railways of Zimbabwe estimates it will ultimately require $1.7 billion to modernize and restore full capacity.

An NRZ employee checks to make sure the train cars are in working order while the train stops in Bulawayo.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
An NRZ employee checks to make sure the train cars are in working order while the train stops in Bulawayo.

In return, DIDG and Transnet will run the railways in partnership with the public National Railways of Zimbabwe, for the next 25 years. DIDG is banking on being able to manage their own revenue and expenses, and run the train more like a private company, without government interference.

DIDG won the bid for this project under Mugabe, but Chimhandamba says doing business in Zimbabwe has changed radically since Mnangagwa and his "open for business" mantra started running things. He says license approvals that used to take months now happen in a week. "You're working with a government that's desperate to make things work," Chimhandamba says. He says it's like going from the dinosaur ages to 2050 overnight.

Still, even if this project is successful, it's a tiny fraction of the international investment and economic growth Zimbabwe needs.

Benches in a waiting area at the Bulawayo train station.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
Benches in a waiting area at the Bulawayo train station.

And economists say a successful election on Monday will be a crucial prerequisite for any economic recovery. It's less about who wins — one recent poll shows incumbent Mnangagwa with the narrowest of leads over opposition candidate Nelson Chamisa — and more about avoiding the violence and allegations of rigging that plagued votes under Mugabe.

Other countries see free, fair and credible elections as "a litmus test for engagement with Zimbabwe," says Leon of the IMF.

Chimhandamba is optimistic that the changes he's seen are permanent, regardless of who wins.

"I think we have paid our school fees," he says, "and I don't see anyone having the ability like the former president [Mugabe] had in terms of pushing through an agenda that is not beneficial to Zimbabwe."

Whoever wins, he says, "I see a different Zimbabwe."

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

A sign hangs from the train station roof in Bulawayo.
Claire Harbage / NPR
/
NPR
A sign hangs from the train station roof in Bulawayo.

Ari Shapiro has been one of the hosts of All Things Considered, NPR's award-winning afternoon newsmagazine, since 2015. During his first two years on the program, listenership to All Things Considered grew at an unprecedented rate, with more people tuning in during a typical quarter-hour than any other program on the radio.