ZANU PF HAS DESTROYED OUR HOSPITALS AND OUR LIVES

Tino Machakaire, the Minister of Youth, was shocked when he visited a hospital in Zimbabwe. He went there to see a relative, but what he saw left him very sad. The hospital was in a very bad state. This is the truth about many hospitals in Zimbabwe today. They are not clean. There are not enough nurses or doctors. Some people are sleeping on the floor. There are no proper medicines. The health system is collapsing.
This is what we have been saying for many years. ZANU PF has failed. Our hospitals are not working. People are dying because they cannot get help. The poor are suffering the most. They have nowhere else to go. Rich people in government go to private hospitals or even fly out of the country. But the rest of us are left to die in broken hospitals.
Machakaire spoke directly to President Emmerson Mnangagwa. He asked the president to go and see the hospitals for himself. He said that the president must listen and see the pain people are feeling. But Mnangagwa will not go. He knows what is happening. He just doesn’t care. He only cares about power and protecting his friends.
It is clear that even people inside the ZANU PF government are starting to see the truth. Machakaire said that many people are crying out. He said the public outcry is not a lie. It is real. The people are suffering every day. But for many years, ZANU PF has been telling lies. They said everything is fine. They said we are building hospitals. But the truth is that they only care about elections and stealing money.
This is not the Zimbabwe we want. Our health system must take care of all people, not just a few. Every person, rich or poor, deserves good medical care. But under ZANU PF, this is only a dream. Our leaders are too busy enjoying power while the people die in silence.
Machakaire is trying to sound honest. He said the president is a good man with compassion. He said Mnangagwa listens to the people. But this is not true. If the president really cared, our hospitals would not be in this state. People would not have to buy gloves, drips, or painkillers before they are treated. Pregnant women would not die because there is no doctor. Children would not be sent home because there are no drugs.
We thank Machakaire for speaking up. But it is too late. The system is broken. And ZANU PF broke it. They have been in power for more than 40 years. What have they done for hospitals? They built roads to their farms. They bought cars for ministers. They gave jobs to their friends. But the hospitals, schools, and water systems were forgotten.
This is why we must speak out. We must continue to tell the truth. We cannot be silent while our people suffer and die. It is not just a health crisis. It is a leadership crisis. The people leading us have failed. They are not fit to govern.
Zimbabweans must rise and demand change. We must vote them out. We must say enough is enough. A better Zimbabwe is possible, but not under ZANU PF. We need leaders who care. Leaders who act. Leaders who serve the people, not themselves. Until then, our hospitals will remain graveyards for the poor.
This is not just about hospitals. It is about life. And under ZANU PF, life in Zimbabwe is slowly being killed.
This article speaks the truth. Zimbabwean hospitals are in crisis, and no amount of PR can hide it. Leaders must stop pretending and start acting. If even insiders like Machakaire are now shocked, then things are worse than we thought. This is what 40 years of ZANU PF rule has delivered.It’s heartbreaking that people must bring their own medicine to public hospitals. This is not normal, and we should never accept it as such. You’ve said it clearly: this is not just about hospitals, it’s about failed leadership. We need leaders who will fix, not cover up the pain of the people.
At least Minister Machakaire visited and acknowledged the problems. That’s leadership. Blaming ZANU PF for everything shows you’re not interested in real solutions. The health sector challenges are due to sanctions, not ZANU PF. If the West truly cared, they would lift those sanctions instead of funding propaganda.
Criticism is easy, but governance is complex. Fixing a broken colonial health system takes time. Activists should contribute ideas instead of fueling anger. You talk about hospitals like they collapsed yesterday. These are long-term issues. Blaming one party without offering real fixes is not helpful.