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Wikipedia

Harare

Harare (/həˈrɑːr/;[5] formerly Salisbury /ˈsɔːlzbəri/)[6] is the capital and most populous city of Zimbabwe. The city proper has an area of 940 km2 (371 mi2) and a population of 2.12 million in the 2012 census[1] and an estimated 3.12 million in its metropolitan area in 2019.[2] Situated in north-eastern Zimbabwe in the country's Mashonaland region, Harare is a metropolitan province, which also incorporates the municipalities of Chitungwiza and Epworth.[7] The city sits on a plateau at an elevation of 1,483 metres (4,865 feet) above sea level and its climate falls into the subtropical highland category.

Harare
Clockwise, from top: Harare skyline; Jacaranda trees lining Josiah Chinamano Avenue; Parliament of Zimbabwe (front) and the Anglican Cathedral (behind); downtown Harare; New Reserve Bank Tower; Heroes Acre monument
Nicknames: 
Sunshine City, H Town
Mottoes: 
  • Nongera GroopVanhu (Shona)
  • "Forward with Service to the People"
Location of Harare Province in Zimbabwe
Coordinates: 17°49′45″S 31°3′8″E / 17.82917°S 31.05222°E / -17.82917; 31.05222Coordinates: 17°49′45″S 31°3′8″E / 17.82917°S 31.05222°E / -17.82917; 31.05222
CountryZimbabwe
ProvinceHarare
Founded12 September 1890
Incorporated (city)1935
Renamed Harare18 April 1982
Government
 • TypeMayor–council
 • MayorJacob Mafume (CCC)
 • CouncilHarare City Council
Area
 • Capital city and Province940 km2 (360 sq mi)
Elevation
1,490 m (4,890 ft)
Population
 (2012 census)
 • Capital city and Province2,123,132[1]
 • Urban
2,013,048[3]
 • Metro
3,120,917[2]
 (2019 estimate)
DemonymHararean
Time zoneUTC+2 (CAT)
Area code242
HDI (2018)0.645[4]
Medium
Dialling code 242 (or 0242 from within Zimbabwe)

The city was founded in 1890 by the Pioneer Column, a small military force of the British South Africa Company, and named Fort Salisbury after the UK Prime Minister Lord Salisbury. Company administrators demarcated the city and ran it until Southern Rhodesia achieved responsible government in 1923. Salisbury was thereafter the seat of the Southern Rhodesian (later Rhodesian) government and, between 1953 and 1963, the capital of the Central African Federation. It retained the name Salisbury until 1982, when it was renamed Harare on the second anniversary of Zimbabwean independence from the United Kingdom.

Long the commercial capital of Zimbabwe, Harare has seen economic ups and downs since the 2000s. It remains an important centre of commerce, government, finance, real estate, manufacturing, healthcare, design, education, art, culture, tourism, agriculture, mining and regional affairs.[8] Harare has the second-highest number of embassies in Southern Africa and serves as the location of the African headquarters of the World Health Organization, which it shares with Brazzaville.[9]

Harare has hosted multiple international conferences and events, including the 1995 All-Africa Games and the 2003 Cricket World Cup. In 2018, Harare was ranked as a Gamma world city. The city's marquee festival is the Harare International Festival of the Arts, modelled on the Edinburgh Festival and one of the largest arts festivals in the southern hemisphere.[10] It is also home to Dynamos FC, the club with the most titles in Zimbabwean football.

History

 
The Pioneer Column hoists the Union Jack on the kopje overlooking the city, 13 September 1890.
 
Salisbury in 1930

The Pioneer Column, a military volunteer force of settlers organised by Cecil Rhodes, founded the city on 12 September 1890 as a fort.[11][12] They originally named the city Fort Salisbury after The 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, then-Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and it subsequently became known simply as Salisbury. The Salisbury Polo Club was formed in 1896.[13] It was declared to be a municipality in 1897 and it became a city in 1935.[14]

 
Parliament House, constructed in 1895.

The area at the time of founding of the city was poorly drained and earliest development was on sloping ground along the left bank of a stream that is now the course of a trunk road (Julius Nyerere Way). The first area to be fully drained was near the head of the stream and was named Causeway as a result. This area is now the site of many of the most important government buildings, including the Senate House and the Office of the Prime Minister, now renamed for the use of the President after the position was abolished in January 1988.[15]

 
Jameson Avenue, Salisbury (now Samora Machel Avenue, Harare) in 1970

Salisbury was the capital of the self-governing British colony of Southern Rhodesia from 1923, and of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland from 1953 to 1963. Ian Smith's Rhodesian Front government declared Rhodesia independent from the United Kingdom on 11 November 1965, and proclaimed the Republic of Rhodesia in 1970. Subsequently, the nation became the short-lived state of Zimbabwe Rhodesia, it was not until 18 April 1980 that the country was internationally recognised as independent as the Republic of Zimbabwe.

Post-war period

In the immediate years after World War II, Salisbury expanded rapidly, its growth boosted by its designation as the capital of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, which ushered in a wave of liberalism, investment and developmentalism from 1953 to 1963, transforming the city's skyline in the process.[16] This was accompanied by significant post-war immigration, primarily from Great Britain, across Southern Africa and to a lesser extent, Southern Europe. The rapid rise of motor vehicle ownership and the investment in road development greatly accelerated the outward suburban sprawl and saw the development of suburbs such as Alexandra Park and Mount Pleasant. At the same time mostly black suburbs such as Highfield suffered from overcrowding as the population boomed.

The optimism and prosperity of this period proved to be short-lived, as the Federation collapsed, which hindered the city's prosperity.[16]

Post-independence years

 
New Reserve Bank Tower, completed 1997

The city initially boomed under a wave of optimism and investment that followed the country's independence in 1980. The name of the city was changed to Harare on 18 April 1982, the second anniversary of Zimbabwean independence, taking its name from the village near Harare Kopje of the Shona chief Neharawa, whose nickname was "he who does not sleep".[17] Prior to independence, "Harare" was the name of the black residential area now known as Mbare.

Significant investment in education and healthcare produced a confident and growing middle class, evidenced by the rise of firms such as Econet Global and innovative design and architecture, exemplified by the Eastgate Centre. A notable symbol of this era in Harare's history is the New Reserve Bank Tower, one of the city's major landmarks.

However, by 1992, Harare began to experience an economic downturn and the government responded by enacting neoliberal reforms, which led to a boom in banking, finance and agriculture, while leading to significant job losses in manufacturing, thereby greatly increasing unemployment and income inequality. Domestic firms struggled to compete with foreign imports leading to the collapse of several institutions, particularly in the textile industry.[16]

Economic difficulties and hyperinflation (1999–2008)

In the early twenty-first century, Harare has been adversely affected by the political and economic crisis that is plaguing Zimbabwe, after the contested 2002 presidential election and 2005 parliamentary elections. The elected council was replaced by a government-appointed commission for alleged inefficiency, but essential services such as rubbish collection and street repairs rapidly worsened, and are now virtually non-existent in poorer parts of the city. In May 2006, the Zimbabwean newspaper the Financial Gazette, described the city in an editorial as a "sunshine city-turned-sewage farm".[18] In 2009, Harare was voted to be the toughest city to live in according to the Economist Intelligence Unit's livability poll.[19] The situation was unchanged in 2011, according to the same poll, which is based on stability, healthcare, culture and environment, education, and infrastructure.[20]

Operation Murambatsvina

In May 2005, the Zimbabwean government demolished shanties, illegal vending sites, backyard cottages in Harare, Epworth and the other cities in the country in Operation Murambatsvina[21] ("Drive Out Trash"). It was widely alleged[weasel words] that the true purpose of the campaign was to punish the urban poor for supporting the opposition Movement for Democratic Change and to reduce the likelihood of mass action against the government by driving people out of the cities.[citation needed] The government claimed it was necessitated by a rise of criminality and disease.[citation needed] This was followed by Operation Garikayi/Hlalani Kuhle (Operation "Better Living") a year later, which consisted of building concrete housing of poor quality.[citation needed]

Economic uncertainty

In late March 2010, Harare's Joina City Tower was finally opened after fourteen years of delayed construction, marketed as Harare's new Pride.[22] Initially, uptake of space in the tower was low, with office occupancy at only 3% in October 2011.[23] By May 2013, office occupancy had risen to around half, with all the retail space occupied.[24]

The Economist Intelligence Unit rated Harare as the world's least liveable city out of 140 surveyed in February 2011,[25] rising to 137th out of 140 in August 2012.[26]

In March 2015, Harare City Council planned a two-year project to install 4,000 solar street lights, at a cost of $15,000,000 starting in the central business district.[27]

In November 2017, the biggest demonstration in the history of the Republic of Zimbabwe was held in Harare, which led to the forced resignation of the long-serving 93-year-old President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, an event which was part of the first successful coup in Zimbabwe.[28][29]

Contemporary Harare

Since 2000, Harare has experienced periods of spectacular decline, particularly in the 2000s, but since the Great Recession it has stabilised and experienced significant population growth, along with uneven economic growth. Despite this volatility (or perhaps because of it), there has been substantial international investment and speculation in the city's financial and property markets. Major development has occurred on the urban fringes of the city has occurred in areas such as Borrowdale, Glen Lorne, The Grange, Mount Pleasant Heights, and the new suburbs of, Hogerty Hill, Shawasha Hills, Bloomingdale and Westlea resulting in urban sprawl into nearby Mount Hampden, Ruwa and Norton.[30] In addition, inner city areas such as Avondale, Eastlea, Belgravia, Newlands and Milton Park have seen increased gentrification driven by speculation from expat Zimbabweans that has also attracted other foreign buyers, resulting in high property prices and widespread rent increases.[31] Harare sustained the highest population increase and urban development of any major Zimbabwean city since 2000, with other cities such as Bulawayo, Gweru and Mutare largely stagnating during the same period.[32]

From 2006, the growth of the city extended into its northern and western fringes, beyond the city's urban growth boundary. Predictions of the metropolitan area reaching 4 to 5 million by 2025, have sparked concerns of unchecked sprawl and unregulated development.[33] In addition, the concentration of real estate development in Harare has come at the expense of other cities such as Gweru, and Bulawayo, particularly the latter, which is increasingly characterized by stagnation and high unemployment due to the collapse of many of its heavy industries. Today, Harare's property market remains highly priced, more so than regional cities such as Johannesburg and Cape Town, with the top end of the market completely dominated by wealthier dual-citizen Zimbabweans (see Zimbabwean diaspora and Zimbabweans in the United Kingdom), Chinese and South African buyers and largely unaffordable to most locals.[30][33] Such gentrification and speculation is especially jarring given the country's high unemployment. Additionally, in 2020, Harare was classified as a Gamma city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network.[34]

Demographics

The population of Harare is 2,123,132 people. Over 90% of people in Harare are Shona-speaking people of African descent. Harare is also home to many Ndebele people and Kalanga people as well. Roughly 25,000 White Zimbabweans live in the Harare metro area as well.[35]

Geography

Topography

The city sits on one of the higher parts of the Highveld plateau of Zimbabwe at an elevation of 1,483 metres (4,865 feet). The original landscape could be described as a "parkland".[36] The soils of Harare are reddish brown granular clay in northern and central areas, while some of the southern part has greyish brown sand over pale loamy sand or sandy loam.[37]

Suburbs

The Northern and North Eastern suburbs of Harare are home to the more affluent population of the city including former president Robert Mugabe who lived in Borrowdale Brooke.[38] These northern suburbs are often referred to as 'dales' because of the common suffix -dale found in some suburbs such as Avondale, Greendale and Borrowdale. The dwellings are mostly low density homes of 3 bedrooms or more and these usually are occupied by families.[citation needed]

Harare is often referred to as Zimbabwe's garden or sunshine city for its abundant parks and outdoor amenities.[39] There is an abundance of parks and gardens across town, many close to the CBD with a variety of common and rare plant species amid landscaped vistas, pedestrian pathways and tree-lined avenues.[39] Harare's parks are often considered the best public parks in all of Zimbabwe's major cities. There are also many parks in the surrounding suburbs, particularly the affluent Northern suburbs of Borrowdale, Mount Pleasant and Glen Lorne, north east of the central business district. Several national parks have been designated around the urban area, including the Ewanrigg Botanical Gardens, Domboshava National Park, and Lake Chivero among others. The extensive area covered by Harare is formally divided into hundreds of suburbs, along with independent municipalities such as Epworth, Mount Hampden, Norton and Chitungwiza within the greater metropolitan area.[39]

The Central Business District, Causeway, Rotten Row & The Avenues

The central business district, is characterized by wide streets and a mix of historic, post-war and modern buildings. There are some colonial-era buildings like the Parliament buildings and Civic Centre, but the rest are unremarkable post war buildings.[40] The district is also notable for a number of upmarket hotels such as the Meikles Hotel which are relatively luxurious but not particularly modern. Other downtown sights include, the Kopje Africa Unity Square, the Harare Gardens, the National Gallery, the August House parliamentary buildings and the National Archives. Causeway, a road and sub-neighbourhood of central Harare, is a busy workaday area that acts as the city's embassy row, (along with Belgravia to the north east), in which numerous embassies, diplomatic missions, research institutes, and other international organizations are concentrated.[41] Additionally, many government ministries and museums such as the Zimbabwe Museum of Human Sciences, are located here.[42]

Rotten Row is a sub-district of downtown Harare that begins at the intersection of Prince Edward Street and Samora Machel Avenue and runs to the flyover where it borders Mbare on Cripps Road.[43] Rotten Row was named after a road in London of the same name. The name "Rotten Row" is a corrupted form of the French phrase ‘Route du Roi’, the King's Road.[44] It is best known as Harare's legal district home to The Harare Magistrate's Court, the city's central library and the ZANU-PF building, along with numerous law offices.[43] The neighbourhood also lends its name of to the eponymous book by Petina Gappah published in 2016.[45]

The adjacent Avenues area is most notable as the city's red light district but its image has improved as more young and relatively well-off residents have moved to the area partially gentrifying the inner suburb. However, the area remains somewhat unsafe at night.[46]

The Inner-East

Eastlea, Highlands, Greendale, Milton Park

These are generally densely populated, well-kept compact suburbs. Historically home to newly arrived immigrants and lower middle class residents the area now attracts young professionals, recent graduates and flat dwellers. Traditionally middle to lower-middle class, these neighbourhoods has become relatively more expensive and gentrified, beginning in the 1990s. The Inner East ranks among the most walkable suburbs in the City of Harare with attractive townhouses, and flats, along with mixed-use areas, making them extremely desirable not just to locals but outside investors who have fueled the city's real estate boom over the past decade.[33] These suburbs are often considered a ‘middle-zone’ between affluent northern areas like Avondale West and Glen Lorne, and the grittier city centre. Houses in Eastlea and Greendale are increasingly being bought by small businesses due to lack of space in the downtown, and as one may find an IT company that has a swimming pool and garden. Highlands is also notable for its temperate micro-climate and being home of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, while Milton Park, Harare is an emerging, bohemian, mixed-use area with residential, commercial and entertainment venues.[46]

The Northeast

Chisipite, Colne Valley, Borrowdale, Borrowdale Brooke, Glen Lorne, Gunhill, The Grange, Pomona, Umwimsidale, Hogarty Hill

The most affluent and developed part of the city, especially Borrowdale and Glen Lorne. Sprawling lawns, tennis courts and large mansions dot many a suburb. It is also the greenest part of Harare: with hills overlooking green Msasa trees and well-kept gardens. In recent years a number of building projects were started and stalled due to lack of money and the unpredictability of the Zimbabwean economy, which has left a number half-finished homes. Borrowdale in particular, is home to much of the country's elite, along with diplomats, business executives, expats and the second homes of wealthier members of the Zimbabwean diaspora.[46] Much of city's Anglo African population tends to congregate here, along with the rest of the Northern suburbs. Shopping centres like Borrowdale Village and Sam Levy's Village, cater to the most affluent of the city's residents. Crime is low by international standards and at night, the area is home to various pubs, bars, restaurants and nightclubs.

The North

Avondale West, Strathaven, Mount Pleasant, Alexandra Park, Belgravia, Bluff Hill, Greystone Park

Well-to-do suburbs with pretty tree-lined avenues and coffee shops tucked near gardens. These are among the more well-off areas of Harare, but not as wealthy as the North-East. Avondale Shopping Centre is the areas commercial heart, noted for its theatres, flea market and independent stores. Mount Pleasant is home to the University of Zimbabwe the country's leading tertiary and research institution, which gives the area an academic and bohemian atmosphere when school is in session. Unfortunately, a lack of funding from the government means that the area is unaffordable to students, hindering the development of a true student ghetto as most students have to commute to Mount Pleasant due to a lack of student housing. Another new building in Harare is the British Embassy built in 2008 and nearby Arundel office park houses the regional United Nations offices.[46]

The Northwest

Avondale, Emerald Hill, Avonlea, Greencroft, Mabelreign, Malborough, Saint Andrews Park, Westgate

The city's North West is largely a leafy and residential upper middle class area best known for the outdoor mall at Westgate, home to numerous independent stores, movie theatres and other higher-end shopping. The area is also host to the new US embassy. Also, Saint Andrews Park is best known for the Warren Hills Golf Course as well as its proximity to the National Sports Stadium.

Nearby Emerald Hill is named so either due to the green colour of the hill due to the large number of trees or its Irish connections – many of the roads in the suburb have Irish names, such as Dublin, Belfast, Wicklow and Cork.[46] The area is also notable for its Catholic institutions such as St. John's High School and the Dominican Convent.[47] While the area was home to an Irish Catholic community they have largely been assimilated into the larger white Zimbabwean community or have joined the ranks of the Zimbabwean diaspora abroad. Other parts of the North West are leafy and quiet but have become slightly rough around the edges since the mid-2000s. The country's economic crisis in that decade led to thousands of local university-educated residents and professionals emigrating to the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, thus the area lacks much of the wealth and vibrancy it had in the nineties.[46]

The East

Arcadia, Braeside, Hillside, Belvedere, Greendale, St. Martins, Newlands, Arlington

Notable suburbs include Arcadia, Hillside and Braeside, renowned for their historic Goffal (Coloured Zimbabwean) communities and Belvedere and Greendale, noted for their Asian residents of Indian descent.

Newlands was named by Colin Duff, the secretary for Agriculture in the 1920s, who had played for Western Cape Province before heading north. When Gerhardt Van der Byl retired back to the Cape Town in 1927, he sold his farm Welmoed to the Salisbury Real Estate Co, a property vehicle owned largely by Scots. Arlington is a newer residential settlement east of the capital adjacent to Harare International Airport. Owned by former mayor of Salisbury, Mayor Brown named his farm, Arlington. He was from Iowa and joined occupational forces to collect specimens for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.[40]

The Industrial South-Central

Workington, Southerton, Willowvale, Graniteside, Tynwald

Harare's big factories are here, producing clothing, soft drinks, bricks and vehicles. Once home to Southern European immigrants of Greek, Italian and Portuguese extraction, most residents today are working and lower middle class Shona people and the descendants of Zambian, Mozambique and Malawian immigrants.[48][49] Willowvale, is perhaps best known for the 1988 Willowgate scandal implicated several members of the ZANU-PF party in a scheme where automobiles were illegally resold by various government officials.

The High Density Southwest

Dzivarasekwa, Warren Park, Kuwadzana, Mufakose, Budiriro, Highfield, Glen View, Waterfalls

These areas are a mixture of medium- and high-density areas, rarely visited by outsiders. Houses are generally smaller and more tightly packed together. Some of these townships were initially set up by the city government from the 1930s onwards. Highfield is second-oldest high-density suburb in Harare was established in 1930.[46] It was established for black settlement during the United Federal Party government of Godfrey Huggins.[48] Highfield was primarily set up by the colonial Government to provide labour to the Southerton and Workington industrial areas.

Residents are mainly poor and working-class, although there are more lower middle class members who have bigger properties: the townships are varied and each has its own personality, and were home to famous musicians such as Oliver Mtukudzi and Thomas Mapfumo. They are also home to a number of small industries, however, the region also has the highest unemployment and poverty rate in the city. The poor state of the area has been exacerbated by neglect from city government, leading to a lack of adequate electric, water and sanitary services in the area. These poor conditions have led to many former residents to choose to move south to Johannesburg and other cities in South Africa, but they are quickly replaced by the internal migration of rural Zimbabweans seeking opportunity in the city.[46]

Climate

 
Jacaranda trees in Montagu Ave, Salisbury in 1975

Under the Köppen climate classification, Harare has a subtropical highland climate (Köppen Cwb), an oceanic climate variety. Because the city is situated on a plateau, its high altitude and cool south-easterly airflow cause it to have a climate that is cooler and drier than a tropical or subtropical climate.

The average annual temperature is 17.95 °C (64.3 °F), rather low for the tropics. This is due to its high altitude position and the prevalence of a cool south-easterly airflow.[50]

There are three main seasons: a warm, wet summer from November to March/April; a cool, dry winter from May to August (corresponding to winter in the Southern Hemisphere); and a warm to hot, dry season in September/October. Daily temperature ranges are about 7–22 °C (45–72 °F) in July (the coldest month), about 15–29 °C (59–84 °F) in October (the hottest month) and about 16–26 °C (61–79 °F) in January (midsummer). The hottest year on record was 1914 with 19.73 °C (67.5 °F) and the coldest year was 1965 with 17.13 °C (62.8 °F).

The average annual rainfall is about 825 mm (32.5 in) in the southwest, rising to 855 mm (33.7 in) on the higher land of the northeast (from around Borrowdale to Glen Lorne). Very little rain typically falls during the period May to September, although sporadic showers occur most years. Rainfall varies a great deal from year to year and follows cycles of wet and dry periods from 7 to 10 years long. Records begin in October 1890 but all three Harare stations stopped reporting in early 2004.[51]

The climate supports a natural vegetation of open woodland. The most common tree of the local region is the Msasa Brachystegia spiciformis that colours the landscape wine red with its new leaves in late August. Two introduced species of trees, the jacaranda and the flamboyant from South America and Madagascar respectively, which were introduced during the colonial era, contribute to the city's colour palette with streets lined with either the lilac blossoms of the jacaranda or the flame red blooms from the flamboyant. They flower in October/November and are planted on alternative streets in the capital. Also prevalent is bougainvillea. Some trees from Northern Hemisphere middle latitudes are also cultivated, including American sweetgum, English oak, Japanese oak and Spanish oak.[52]

Climate data for Harare (1961–1990, extremes 1897–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 33.9
(93.0)
35.0
(95.0)
32.3
(90.1)
32.0
(89.6)
30.0
(86.0)
27.7
(81.9)
28.8
(83.8)
31.0
(87.8)
35.0
(95.0)
36.7
(98.1)
35.3
(95.5)
33.5
(92.3)
36.7
(98.1)
Average high °C (°F) 26.2
(79.2)
26.0
(78.8)
26.2
(79.2)
25.6
(78.1)
23.8
(74.8)
21.8
(71.2)
21.6
(70.9)
24.1
(75.4)
28.4
(83.1)
28.8
(83.8)
27.6
(81.7)
26.3
(79.3)
25.5
(77.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) 21.0
(69.8)
20.7
(69.3)
20.3
(68.5)
18.8
(65.8)
16.1
(61.0)
13.7
(56.7)
13.4
(56.1)
15.5
(59.9)
18.6
(65.5)
20.8
(69.4)
21.2
(70.2)
20.9
(69.6)
18.4
(65.1)
Average low °C (°F) 15.8
(60.4)
15.7
(60.3)
14.5
(58.1)
12.5
(54.5)
9.3
(48.7)
6.8
(44.2)
6.5
(43.7)
8.5
(47.3)
11.7
(53.1)
14.5
(58.1)
15.5
(59.9)
15.8
(60.4)
12.3
(54.1)
Record low °C (°F) 9.6
(49.3)
8.0
(46.4)
7.5
(45.5)
4.7
(40.5)
2.8
(37.0)
0.1
(32.2)
0.1
(32.2)
1.1
(34.0)
4.1
(39.4)
5.1
(41.2)
6.1
(43.0)
10.0
(50.0)
0.1
(32.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 190.8
(7.51)
176.3
(6.94)
99.1
(3.90)
37.2
(1.46)
7.4
(0.29)
1.8
(0.07)
2.3
(0.09)
2.9
(0.11)
6.5
(0.26)
40.4
(1.59)
93.2
(3.67)
182.7
(7.19)
840.6
(33.09)
Average precipitation days 17 14 10 5 2 1 0 1 1 5 10 16 82
Average relative humidity (%) 76 77 72 67 62 60 55 50 45 48 63 73 62
Mean monthly sunshine hours 217.0 190.4 232.5 249.0 269.7 264.0 279.0 300.7 294.0 285.2 231.0 198.4 3,010.9
Mean daily sunshine hours 7.0 6.8 7.5 8.3 8.7 8.8 9.0 9.7 9.8 9.2 7.7 6.4 8.2
Source 1: World Meteorological Organization,[53] NOAA (sun and mean temperature, 1961–1990),[54]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (humidity, 1954–1975),[55] Meteo Climat (record highs and lows)[56]

International venue

Harare has been the location of several international summits such as the 8th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (6 September 1986) and Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1991.[57] The latter produced the Harare Declaration, dictating the membership criteria of the Commonwealth. In 1998, Harare was the host city of the 8th Assembly of the World Council of Churches.[58]

In 1995, Harare hosted most of the sixth All-Africa Games, sharing the event with other Zimbabwean cities such as Bulawayo and Chitungwiza. It has hosted some of the matches of 2003 Cricket World Cup which was hosted jointly by Kenya, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Several of the matches were also held in Bulawayo. Harare also hosted the ICC Cricket 2018 World Cup Qualifier matches in March 2018.[59]

The city is also the site of one of the Harare International Festival of the Arts (HIFA), which has featured such acclaimed artists as Cape Verdean singer Sara Tavares.[60]

Economy

Harare is Zimbabwe's leading financial, commercial, and communications centre, as well as an international trade centre for tobacco, maize, cotton, and citrus fruits. Manufacturing, including textiles, steel, and chemicals, are also economically significant, as is the trade of precious minerals such as gold, diamonds, chrome and platinum. It has also experienced a real estate boom recently, particularly in the wealthy Northern suburbs, with prices rising dramatically over the last decade, despite challenges in other sectors of the economy.[61] This boom has largely been fueled by members of the Zimbabwean diaspora and speculation, with investors hedging against the local currency.[61][30] However the once booming market has begun to cool off due to a 2019 hike in interest rates and the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving a number of projects unfinished.[62] Harare has been the location of several international summits such as the 8th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (6 September, 1986) and Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1991.[57] The latter produced the Harare Declaration, dictating the membership criteria of the Commonwealth. In 1998, Harare was the host city of the 8th Assembly of the World Council of Churches.[58] While it may have seemed the economy was finally making a recovery, early investor optimism following the inauguration of the Mnangagwa government has largely subsided due to the slow pace of reforms to improve the business environment.[63] The economy suffered high inflation and frequent power outages in 2019, which further hampered investment. A lack of implementation of adequate monetary reforms to complement the government's efforts to reduce the budget deficit also undermined investor confidence in the financial sector. Although the government has repeatedly stressed its focus on improving transparency, the ease of doing business, and fighting corruption, progress remains limited under the Mnangagwa administration.[63]

Another challenge to Harare's economy is the persistent emigration of highly educated and skilled residents to the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, the Ireland and New Zealand, largely due to the economic downturn and political unrest.[64] The city's brain drain, almost unprecedented compared to other emerging markets, has led to the decline of a local entrepreneurial class, an overstretched and declining middle class and a dearth of employment opportunities outside the informal and public sector.[64] In addition, the city's working class residents are increasingly moving to nearby South Africa and Botswana, though they are readily replaced by less well off rural migrants.[65] However, despite over a decade of neglect, the city's infrastructure and human capital still compares favorably with cities in other parts of Africa, and Latin America. It remains to be seen whether the current government can entice its young, diverse and well educated Zimbabwean diaspora numbering some 4 to 7 million people, to invest in the economy, let alone consider returning.[66][64][67]

Shopping and retail

Locally produced art, handicrafts and souvenirs can be purchased at Doon Estate, Uwminsdale, Avondale Market and Mbare Musika. Msasa Park and Umwinsdale in particular, host a number of galleries that produce, high-quality Shona soapstone sculptures and textiles such as Patrick Mavros studios, which has another gallery in Knightsbridge, London.[68] International brands are generally less common in Harare than in European cities, however conventional and luxury shopping can be found on Fife Avenue, Sam Nujoma (Union) Avenue, Arundel Village, Avondale, Borrowdale, Eastgate and Westgate.[69] Virtually all luxury shopping is concentrated in the wealthier Northern suburbs, particularly Borrowdale with stores that command higher prices than most visitors would expect. The Borrowdale and Borrowdale Brooke neighborhoods are regarded among the most sophisticated places in town, with upscale shopping, restaurants and amenities.[70][71]

Harare also has a good choice of supermarkets including Le Bon Marche, Pick n Pay, TM and Spar. Greater variety and independent stores tend to be concentrated in the North, Northeast and Northwest suburbs along with, surprisingly, Newlands and Greendale Avenue in Greendale.[70]

Transportation

Harare is a relatively young city, which sprawled during the country's post-Federation and post-independence booms and was segregated along racial and class lines until 1980, resulting in a mostly low density urban area geared towards private motorists, lacking a convenient public transportation system.[72] Very little investment has been made to develop an effective and integrated public transportation system, leaving a significant number of the city's residents dependent on the city's informal minibus taxis.[72] The rise of local ridesharing apps such as GTaxi and Hwindi, has partly eased pressure on the city's transportation system, however they are still prices out of the range of most working people.[73] In addition, bus services are also available but they are mostly geared towards intercity travel and recreation than journeys within Harare itself.

Public transport system within the city includes both public and private sector operations. The former consist of ZUPCO buses and National Railways of Zimbabwe commuter trains. Privately owned public transport comprised licensed station wagons, nicknamed emergency taxis until 1993, when the government began to replace them with licensed buses and minibuses, referred to officially as commuter omnibuses.[74] Harare has two kinds of taxis, metered taxis and the much more ubiquitous share taxis or 'kombis'. Unlike many other cities, metered taxis generally do not drive around the city looking for passengers and instead must be called and ordered to a destination. The minibus "taxis" are the de facto day-to-day and essential form of transport for the majority of the population.[75]

The National Railways of Zimbabwe operates a daily overnight passenger train service that runs from Harare to Mutare and another one from Harare to Bulawayo, using the Beira–Bulawayo railway.[76] Harare is linked by long-distance bus services to most parts of Zimbabwe.

The city is crossed by Transafrican Highway 9 (TAH 9), which connects it to the cities of Lusaka and Beira.

The largest airport of the country, the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport, serves Harare.

Education

The University of Zimbabwe is located in Harare. Founded in 1952, the university is the country's oldest and largest, offering a wide range of undergraduate and postgraduate programs. The student population stands at 20,399, with 17,718 undergraduate students and 2,681 postgraduate students.[77]

Sports

 
Kirsty Coventry, former Olympian and current Minister of Sport

Harare has long been regarded as Zimbabwe's sporting capital due to the role it has played in the development of Zimbabwean sport, the range and quality of its sporting events and venues, and its high rates of spectatorship and participation.[78] The city is also home to more professional sports teams competing at the national and international level, than any other Zimbabwean city. Football is most popular sport in Harare, with the city producing many footballers who have gone on to play in the English Premier League and elsewhere.

Harare is also home to Harare Sports Club ground, which hosts many Test, One Day Internationals and T20I Cricket matches. It was also the one of the host cities for the 2003 Cricket World Cup. Harare is home to the Zimbabwe Premier Soccer League clubs, Dynamos F.C.,Black Rhinos F.C. and CAPS United F.C.[79] The main stadiums are National Sports Stadium and Rufaro Stadium.

Popular teams

The following table shows the sports teams in the Harare area, sorted primarily by attendance in the most recent season for which data is available.

  1. ^ a b c d e f Year team moved to Salisbury

Football and cricket

Football is the most popular sport in Harare, particularly among working-class residents. Cricket and rugby are also popular sports with those from middle-class backgrounds. Harare is home to Harare Sports Club ground. It has hosted many Test, One Day Internationals and T20 Cricket matches.[80] The city successfully hosted most of the sixth All-Africa Games and several matches in the 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup at Harare Sports Club. Harare is also home to the Zimbabwe Premier Soccer League clubs Dynamos F.C., Harare City, Black Rhinos F.C. and CAPS United F.C.[79]

The main football stadiums are National Sports Stadium and Rufaro Stadium.

Virtually all first class and international cricket matches are hosted at Harare Sports Club, with most domestic tours occurring in spring and summer. This city is also home to the Mashonaland Eagles in the domestic Logan Cup tournament. The Eagles are coached by renowned former Zimbabwe national cricket team batsman Grant Flower.[81] The team are one of the country's strongest sides and last won the Logan Cup in the 2015–16 Logan Cup season.[80]

Rugby

The city is also the heartland of rugby union in Zimbabwe, rivaling Windhoek in Namibia as the strongest rugby region in Africa beyond South Africa. The governing Rhodesia Rugby Football Union was founded here in 1895, becoming the Zimbabwe Rugby Union in 1980. The union and national sides are based in the northern suburb of Alexandra Park.[82] Harare is home to four of the country's national Super Six Rugby League (SSRL) clubs – Harare Sports Club, Old Georgians, Old Hararians and Old Miltonians.[83] Additionally, the Zimbabwe Rugby Academy, the national development side which plays in the second division of the Currie Cup is largely made up of players from the city. International rugby test matches tend to be hosted at Harare Sports Club, the Police Grounds and at Hartsfield in Bulawayo with a particularly strong rivalry with the Namibia national rugby union team. Traditionally the city hosted tours by the British and Irish Lions, Argentina and the All-Blacks on their respective tours of South Africa, however, this is no longer the case due to the end of traditional rugby tours and the Zimbabwe national rugby union team's decline in the international rugby rankings.[84] Indeed, Wales were the last major country to tour Harare back in 1993.[85]

High school teams are generally of a high standard with Prince Edward School, St. George's College, St. John's College all ranking among the country's leading teams and sending their first XV sides to compete against well-known South African high schools during Craven Week.[84] Unfortunately after high school, the city's best players tend to move on to South Africa or the United Kingdom, due to a lack of professionalism and greater educational and earning opportunities abroad, thus depleting the strength of the rugby union in Zimbabwe.[86] Notable internationals hailing from Harare include Tendai Mtawarira, Don Armand and Brian Mujati amongst numerous others.[87]

Media

Harare is host to some of Zimbabwe's leading media outlets. Despite accusations of government censorship and intimidation, the city maintains a robust press, much of which is defiantly critical of the current government.[88] In print media, the most famous paper internationally, is the Herald, the city's oldest newspaper, founded in 1893 and former paper of record prior to its purchase by the government. The paper is best noted for its heavy censorship during the Rhodesian Front government from 1962 to 1979, with many of its articles appearing as redacted- with black boxes marking the words removed by government censors- before its forced purchase.[89] Today it is largely seen as little more than a government mouthpiece by residents and overwhelmingly supports the government line.[90]

In contrast, private newspapers continue to adopt a more independent line and enjoy a more diverse and vibrant readership, unmatched by most other African cities. These include the Financial Gazette, the high brow, financial paper of record, nicknamed 'the Pink Press', for its tradition of printing on a pink broadsheet. Other newspapers are the Zimbabwe Independent, a centre-left newspaper and de facto paper of record, noted for its investigative journalism; the Standard, a centre—left Sunday paper; NewsDay, a left-wing tabloid; H-Metro, a mass-market tabloid; the Daily News, a left wing opposition paper and Kwayedza, the leading Shona language newspaper in Zimbabwe.[90]

Online media outlets include ZimOnline, ZimDaily, the Zimbabwe Guardian and NewZimbabwe.com amongst others.[91][92][89]

Television and radio

The state-owned ZBC TV maintains a monopoly on free to air TV channels in the city, with private broadcasters, such as the defunct Joy TV, coming and going based on the whims of the government.[93] As a response, the majority of the households that can afford to, subscribe to the satellite television distributor, DStv for entertainment, news and sport from Africa and abroad.

Harare is also well served by radio, with a number of the country's leading radio stations, maintaining a presence in the city. There are currently four state-controlled Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corp. channels (SFM, Radio Zimbabwe, Power FM and National FM); and private national commercial free-to-air stations, Star FM, Capital 100.4 FM and ZiFM. In addition, Channel Zim, an alternative satellite channel, and VOA Zimbabwe also broadcast via inexpensive free-to air decoders.[94] Eight newly licensed local commercial stations have been commissioned, but were not yet on air as of 2020.[94]

Commercial stations tend to show similar trends in programming, with high percentages of music, talk radio or phone-in programs and sports over infrequent news bulletins. Also despite the country's 16 official languages, virtually all broadcasts occur in English, Shona and Ndebele.[94]

Notable institutions

Culture

 
National Gallery of Zimbabwe

The arts are thriving in Harare, despite an economic and political crisis, whose effects have offered opportunities for satire, experimentation and reinvention. While authors and musicians such as Doris Lessing, Petina Gappah and Thomas Mapfumo have been long criticized the corruption and shortcomings of the Smith and Mugabe governments, the emergence of protest and critical theatre since 2000 has invigorated the local arts scene.[95] Actors, directors and artists have joined musicians and writers in criticizing political maleficence and audiences have rallied behind them, making the local theatre and art scene one of the most vibrant in the southern hemisphere.[96]

Notable institutions in the city include:

  • National Gallery of Zimbabwe – home to displays of Shona art and stone sculpture
  • Heroes Acre – Heroes Acre is a burial ground and national monument whose purpose is to commemorate pro-independence fighters killed during the Rhodesian Bush War and also contemporary Zimbabweans whose service to their country justifies their burial at the site.
  • Zimbabwe Museum of Human Sciences – near Rotten Row, documents the archaeology of Southern Africa through the Stone Age into the Iron Age.
  • Chapungu Sculpture Park – a sculpture park in Msasa Park, which displays the work of Zimbabwean stone sculptors. It was founded in 1970 by Roy Guthrie, who was instrumental in promoting the work of its sculptors worldwide.
  • National Archives – The second floor Gallery has a small but comprehensive display of some of the artefacts relating to Zimbabwe which are insightful for understanding its history. These include newspapers, photographs other artefacts which detail milestones in Zimbabwean history, while the display on the mezzanine floor concentrates on the first Chimurenga, or Ndebele-Shona revolts of 1896–97 which puts into perspective the historical struggle for independence.[97]
  • National Botanical Gardens – in Alexandra Park, is a good place to visit for a walk or to see Zimbabwe or Southern African plants and woodland habitats such as the msasa, miombo or less commonly the Cape fynbos.
  • Royal Harare Golf Course – an 18-hole championship course which also hosts the Zimbabwe Open each year, part of the Sunshine Tour; the fairways are set in msasa woodland with occasional antelope feeding on the grass.
  • Vaughn Animal Sanctuary- along Shamva and Enterprise Roads and home lions, vervet monkeys and hyenas.
  • Epworth Balancing Rocks – just south out of the city limits, is home to large extraordinary rock formations and ancient rock art friezes
  • Cleveland Dam Recreational Park – on the Mutare highway (A3) magnificent msasa woodland bordering the edges of the dam and pretty views onto the Dam. We spotted cormorants and herons, as well as a water monitor, or leguaan and vervet monkeys. Best avoided at weekends.
  • Ewanrigg Botanical Gardens-
  • Lion and Cheetah Park – although there are few cheetahs presently, if you have only a few days in Harare, or have never seen a live lion, then the Park is worth a visit as it is close to town on the Bulawayo Road (A5).
  • Mukuvisi Woodlands – in Hillside, comprises 263 hectares of indigenous Msasa and Miombo woodland are very conveniently located for an initial introduction to Zimbabwe's game life. It hosts zebra, giraffe, eland, wildebeest, ostrich and impala, including some of their young born within woodlands, as well as a wide variety of birdlife and indigenous flora.[98]
  • The Eastgate Centre- a pioneering and innovatively-designed shopping mall equidistant from Unity Square and Borrowdale.
  • Mbare Musika market – the city's largest and most colourful market has a heady mix of fresh produce, local art and assorted goods. It's the curios that attract tourists here; there is a big collection of neo-traditional sculpture, wooden crafts and basketry. It is located in a poorer section of the city and pickpockets are rife, so it is best visited with a tour group.[98]
  • The Book Cafe – a bohemian hub of literary, social and musical discussion where writers, poets, singers and other artists perform – without censorship.
  • Reps Theatre in Belgravia, hosts a diverse range performances ranging from classical music to improvisational and experimental theater.[97]

Places of worship

Among the places of worship, they are predominantly Christian churches and temples: Assemblies of God, Baptist Convention of Zimbabwe (Baptist World Alliance), Reformed Church in Zimbabwe (World Communion of Reformed Churches), Church of the Province of Central Africa (Anglican Communion), Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Harare (Catholic Church).[99]

International relations

Harare has co-operation agreements and partnerships with the following towns:[100]

Gallery

See also

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Bibliography

External links

  •   Media related to Harare at Wikimedia Commons

harare, this, article, about, capital, city, zimbabwe, city, ethiopia, harar, ɑːr, formerly, salisbury, ɔː, capital, most, populous, city, zimbabwe, city, proper, area, population, million, 2012, census, estimated, million, metropolitan, area, 2019, situated, . This article is about the capital city of Zimbabwe For the city in Ethiopia see Harar Harare h e ˈ r ɑːr eɪ 5 formerly Salisbury ˈ s ɔː l z b er i 6 is the capital and most populous city of Zimbabwe The city proper has an area of 940 km2 371 mi2 and a population of 2 12 million in the 2012 census 1 and an estimated 3 12 million in its metropolitan area in 2019 2 Situated in north eastern Zimbabwe in the country s Mashonaland region Harare is a metropolitan province which also incorporates the municipalities of Chitungwiza and Epworth 7 The city sits on a plateau at an elevation of 1 483 metres 4 865 feet above sea level and its climate falls into the subtropical highland category HarareCapital city and ProvinceClockwise from top Harare skyline Jacaranda trees lining Josiah Chinamano Avenue Parliament of Zimbabwe front and the Anglican Cathedral behind downtown Harare New Reserve Bank Tower Heroes Acre monumentFlagCoat of armsNicknames Sunshine City H TownMottoes Nongera GroopVanhu Shona Forward with Service to the People Location of Harare Province in ZimbabweCoordinates 17 49 45 S 31 3 8 E 17 82917 S 31 05222 E 17 82917 31 05222 Coordinates 17 49 45 S 31 3 8 E 17 82917 S 31 05222 E 17 82917 31 05222CountryZimbabweProvinceHarareFounded12 September 1890Incorporated city 1935Renamed Harare18 April 1982Government TypeMayor council MayorJacob Mafume CCC CouncilHarare City CouncilArea Capital city and Province940 km2 360 sq mi Elevation1 490 m 4 890 ft Population 2012 census Capital city and Province2 123 132 1 Urban2 013 048 3 Metro3 120 917 2 2019 estimate DemonymHarareanTime zoneUTC 2 CAT Area code242HDI 2018 0 645 4 MediumDialling code 242 or 0242 from within Zimbabwe The city was founded in 1890 by the Pioneer Column a small military force of the British South Africa Company and named Fort Salisbury after the UK Prime Minister Lord Salisbury Company administrators demarcated the city and ran it until Southern Rhodesia achieved responsible government in 1923 Salisbury was thereafter the seat of the Southern Rhodesian later Rhodesian government and between 1953 and 1963 the capital of the Central African Federation It retained the name Salisbury until 1982 when it was renamed Harare on the second anniversary of Zimbabwean independence from the United Kingdom Long the commercial capital of Zimbabwe Harare has seen economic ups and downs since the 2000s It remains an important centre of commerce government finance real estate manufacturing healthcare design education art culture tourism agriculture mining and regional affairs 8 Harare has the second highest number of embassies in Southern Africa and serves as the location of the African headquarters of the World Health Organization which it shares with Brazzaville 9 Harare has hosted multiple international conferences and events including the 1995 All Africa Games and the 2003 Cricket World Cup In 2018 Harare was ranked as a Gamma world city The city s marquee festival is the Harare International Festival of the Arts modelled on the Edinburgh Festival and one of the largest arts festivals in the southern hemisphere 10 It is also home to Dynamos FC the club with the most titles in Zimbabwean football Contents 1 History 1 1 Post war period 1 2 Post independence years 1 3 Economic difficulties and hyperinflation 1999 2008 1 3 1 Operation Murambatsvina 1 4 Economic uncertainty 1 5 Contemporary Harare 2 Demographics 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Suburbs 3 2 1 The Central Business District Causeway Rotten Row amp The Avenues 3 2 2 The Inner East 3 2 3 The Northeast 3 2 4 The North 3 2 5 The Northwest 3 2 6 The East 3 2 7 The Industrial South Central 3 2 8 The High Density Southwest 4 Climate 5 International venue 6 Economy 6 1 Shopping and retail 7 Transportation 8 Education 9 Sports 9 1 Popular teams 10 Media 10 1 Television and radio 11 Notable institutions 12 Culture 13 Places of worship 14 International relations 15 Gallery 16 See also 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 External linksHistory EditSee also Timeline of Harare Fort Salisbury redirects here Not to be confused with Fort at Salisbury Point The Pioneer Column hoists the Union Jack on the kopje overlooking the city 13 September 1890 Salisbury in 1930 The Pioneer Column a military volunteer force of settlers organised by Cecil Rhodes founded the city on 12 September 1890 as a fort 11 12 They originally named the city Fort Salisbury after The 3rd Marquess of Salisbury then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and it subsequently became known simply as Salisbury The Salisbury Polo Club was formed in 1896 13 It was declared to be a municipality in 1897 and it became a city in 1935 14 Parliament House constructed in 1895 The area at the time of founding of the city was poorly drained and earliest development was on sloping ground along the left bank of a stream that is now the course of a trunk road Julius Nyerere Way The first area to be fully drained was near the head of the stream and was named Causeway as a result This area is now the site of many of the most important government buildings including the Senate House and the Office of the Prime Minister now renamed for the use of the President after the position was abolished in January 1988 15 Jameson Avenue Salisbury now Samora Machel Avenue Harare in 1970 Salisbury was the capital of the self governing British colony of Southern Rhodesia from 1923 and of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland from 1953 to 1963 Ian Smith s Rhodesian Front government declared Rhodesia independent from the United Kingdom on 11 November 1965 and proclaimed the Republic of Rhodesia in 1970 Subsequently the nation became the short lived state of Zimbabwe Rhodesia it was not until 18 April 1980 that the country was internationally recognised as independent as the Republic of Zimbabwe Post war period Edit In the immediate years after World War II Salisbury expanded rapidly its growth boosted by its designation as the capital of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland which ushered in a wave of liberalism investment and developmentalism from 1953 to 1963 transforming the city s skyline in the process 16 This was accompanied by significant post war immigration primarily from Great Britain across Southern Africa and to a lesser extent Southern Europe The rapid rise of motor vehicle ownership and the investment in road development greatly accelerated the outward suburban sprawl and saw the development of suburbs such as Alexandra Park and Mount Pleasant At the same time mostly black suburbs such as Highfield suffered from overcrowding as the population boomed The optimism and prosperity of this period proved to be short lived as the Federation collapsed which hindered the city s prosperity 16 Post independence years Edit New Reserve Bank Tower completed 1997 The city initially boomed under a wave of optimism and investment that followed the country s independence in 1980 The name of the city was changed to Harare on 18 April 1982 the second anniversary of Zimbabwean independence taking its name from the village near Harare Kopje of the Shona chief Neharawa whose nickname was he who does not sleep 17 Prior to independence Harare was the name of the black residential area now known as Mbare Significant investment in education and healthcare produced a confident and growing middle class evidenced by the rise of firms such as Econet Global and innovative design and architecture exemplified by the Eastgate Centre A notable symbol of this era in Harare s history is the New Reserve Bank Tower one of the city s major landmarks However by 1992 Harare began to experience an economic downturn and the government responded by enacting neoliberal reforms which led to a boom in banking finance and agriculture while leading to significant job losses in manufacturing thereby greatly increasing unemployment and income inequality Domestic firms struggled to compete with foreign imports leading to the collapse of several institutions particularly in the textile industry 16 Economic difficulties and hyperinflation 1999 2008 Edit In the early twenty first century Harare has been adversely affected by the political and economic crisis that is plaguing Zimbabwe after the contested 2002 presidential election and 2005 parliamentary elections The elected council was replaced by a government appointed commission for alleged inefficiency but essential services such as rubbish collection and street repairs rapidly worsened and are now virtually non existent in poorer parts of the city In May 2006 the Zimbabwean newspaper the Financial Gazette described the city in an editorial as a sunshine city turned sewage farm 18 In 2009 Harare was voted to be the toughest city to live in according to the Economist Intelligence Unit s livability poll 19 The situation was unchanged in 2011 according to the same poll which is based on stability healthcare culture and environment education and infrastructure 20 Operation Murambatsvina Edit In May 2005 the Zimbabwean government demolished shanties illegal vending sites backyard cottages in Harare Epworth and the other cities in the country in Operation Murambatsvina 21 Drive Out Trash It was widely alleged weasel words that the true purpose of the campaign was to punish the urban poor for supporting the opposition Movement for Democratic Change and to reduce the likelihood of mass action against the government by driving people out of the cities citation needed The government claimed it was necessitated by a rise of criminality and disease citation needed This was followed by Operation Garikayi Hlalani Kuhle Operation Better Living a year later which consisted of building concrete housing of poor quality citation needed Economic uncertainty Edit In late March 2010 Harare s Joina City Tower was finally opened after fourteen years of delayed construction marketed as Harare s new Pride 22 Initially uptake of space in the tower was low with office occupancy at only 3 in October 2011 23 By May 2013 office occupancy had risen to around half with all the retail space occupied 24 The Economist Intelligence Unit rated Harare as the world s least liveable city out of 140 surveyed in February 2011 25 rising to 137th out of 140 in August 2012 26 In March 2015 Harare City Council planned a two year project to install 4 000 solar street lights at a cost of 15 000 000 starting in the central business district 27 In November 2017 the biggest demonstration in the history of the Republic of Zimbabwe was held in Harare which led to the forced resignation of the long serving 93 year old President of Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe an event which was part of the first successful coup in Zimbabwe 28 29 Contemporary Harare Edit Since 2000 Harare has experienced periods of spectacular decline particularly in the 2000s but since the Great Recession it has stabilised and experienced significant population growth along with uneven economic growth Despite this volatility or perhaps because of it there has been substantial international investment and speculation in the city s financial and property markets Major development has occurred on the urban fringes of the city has occurred in areas such as Borrowdale Glen Lorne The Grange Mount Pleasant Heights and the new suburbs of Hogerty Hill Shawasha Hills Bloomingdale and Westlea resulting in urban sprawl into nearby Mount Hampden Ruwa and Norton 30 In addition inner city areas such as Avondale Eastlea Belgravia Newlands and Milton Park have seen increased gentrification driven by speculation from expat Zimbabweans that has also attracted other foreign buyers resulting in high property prices and widespread rent increases 31 Harare sustained the highest population increase and urban development of any major Zimbabwean city since 2000 with other cities such as Bulawayo Gweru and Mutare largely stagnating during the same period 32 From 2006 the growth of the city extended into its northern and western fringes beyond the city s urban growth boundary Predictions of the metropolitan area reaching 4 to 5 million by 2025 have sparked concerns of unchecked sprawl and unregulated development 33 In addition the concentration of real estate development in Harare has come at the expense of other cities such as Gweru and Bulawayo particularly the latter which is increasingly characterized by stagnation and high unemployment due to the collapse of many of its heavy industries Today Harare s property market remains highly priced more so than regional cities such as Johannesburg and Cape Town with the top end of the market completely dominated by wealthier dual citizen Zimbabweans see Zimbabwean diaspora and Zimbabweans in the United Kingdom Chinese and South African buyers and largely unaffordable to most locals 30 33 Such gentrification and speculation is especially jarring given the country s high unemployment Additionally in 2020 Harare was classified as a Gamma city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network 34 Demographics EditThe population of Harare is 2 123 132 people Over 90 of people in Harare are Shona speaking people of African descent Harare is also home to many Ndebele people and Kalanga people as well Roughly 25 000 White Zimbabweans live in the Harare metro area as well 35 Geography EditTopography Edit The city sits on one of the higher parts of the Highveld plateau of Zimbabwe at an elevation of 1 483 metres 4 865 feet The original landscape could be described as a parkland 36 The soils of Harare are reddish brown granular clay in northern and central areas while some of the southern part has greyish brown sand over pale loamy sand or sandy loam 37 Suburbs Edit Main page Category Suburbs of Harare The Northern and North Eastern suburbs of Harare are home to the more affluent population of the city including former president Robert Mugabe who lived in Borrowdale Brooke 38 These northern suburbs are often referred to as dales because of the common suffix dale found in some suburbs such as Avondale Greendale and Borrowdale The dwellings are mostly low density homes of 3 bedrooms or more and these usually are occupied by families citation needed Harare is often referred to as Zimbabwe s garden or sunshine city for its abundant parks and outdoor amenities 39 There is an abundance of parks and gardens across town many close to the CBD with a variety of common and rare plant species amid landscaped vistas pedestrian pathways and tree lined avenues 39 Harare s parks are often considered the best public parks in all of Zimbabwe s major cities There are also many parks in the surrounding suburbs particularly the affluent Northern suburbs of Borrowdale Mount Pleasant and Glen Lorne north east of the central business district Several national parks have been designated around the urban area including the Ewanrigg Botanical Gardens Domboshava National Park and Lake Chivero among others The extensive area covered by Harare is formally divided into hundreds of suburbs along with independent municipalities such as Epworth Mount Hampden Norton and Chitungwiza within the greater metropolitan area 39 The Central Business District Causeway Rotten Row amp The Avenues Edit The central business district is characterized by wide streets and a mix of historic post war and modern buildings There are some colonial era buildings like the Parliament buildings and Civic Centre but the rest are unremarkable post war buildings 40 The district is also notable for a number of upmarket hotels such as the Meikles Hotel which are relatively luxurious but not particularly modern Other downtown sights include the Kopje Africa Unity Square the Harare Gardens the National Gallery the August House parliamentary buildings and the National Archives Causeway a road and sub neighbourhood of central Harare is a busy workaday area that acts as the city s embassy row along with Belgravia to the north east in which numerous embassies diplomatic missions research institutes and other international organizations are concentrated 41 Additionally many government ministries and museums such as the Zimbabwe Museum of Human Sciences are located here 42 Rotten Row is a sub district of downtown Harare that begins at the intersection of Prince Edward Street and Samora Machel Avenue and runs to the flyover where it borders Mbare on Cripps Road 43 Rotten Row was named after a road in London of the same name The name Rotten Row is a corrupted form of the French phrase Route du Roi the King s Road 44 It is best known as Harare s legal district home to The Harare Magistrate s Court the city s central library and the ZANU PF building along with numerous law offices 43 The neighbourhood also lends its name of to the eponymous book by Petina Gappah published in 2016 45 The adjacent Avenues area is most notable as the city s red light district but its image has improved as more young and relatively well off residents have moved to the area partially gentrifying the inner suburb However the area remains somewhat unsafe at night 46 The Inner East Edit Eastlea Highlands Greendale Milton ParkThese are generally densely populated well kept compact suburbs Historically home to newly arrived immigrants and lower middle class residents the area now attracts young professionals recent graduates and flat dwellers Traditionally middle to lower middle class these neighbourhoods has become relatively more expensive and gentrified beginning in the 1990s The Inner East ranks among the most walkable suburbs in the City of Harare with attractive townhouses and flats along with mixed use areas making them extremely desirable not just to locals but outside investors who have fueled the city s real estate boom over the past decade 33 These suburbs are often considered a middle zone between affluent northern areas like Avondale West and Glen Lorne and the grittier city centre Houses in Eastlea and Greendale are increasingly being bought by small businesses due to lack of space in the downtown and as one may find an IT company that has a swimming pool and garden Highlands is also notable for its temperate micro climate and being home of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation while Milton Park Harare is an emerging bohemian mixed use area with residential commercial and entertainment venues 46 The Northeast Edit Chisipite Colne Valley Borrowdale Borrowdale Brooke Glen Lorne Gunhill The Grange Pomona Umwimsidale Hogarty HillThe most affluent and developed part of the city especially Borrowdale and Glen Lorne Sprawling lawns tennis courts and large mansions dot many a suburb It is also the greenest part of Harare with hills overlooking green Msasa trees and well kept gardens In recent years a number of building projects were started and stalled due to lack of money and the unpredictability of the Zimbabwean economy which has left a number half finished homes Borrowdale in particular is home to much of the country s elite along with diplomats business executives expats and the second homes of wealthier members of the Zimbabwean diaspora 46 Much of city s Anglo African population tends to congregate here along with the rest of the Northern suburbs Shopping centres like Borrowdale Village and Sam Levy s Village cater to the most affluent of the city s residents Crime is low by international standards and at night the area is home to various pubs bars restaurants and nightclubs The North Edit Avondale West Strathaven Mount Pleasant Alexandra Park Belgravia Bluff Hill Greystone ParkWell to do suburbs with pretty tree lined avenues and coffee shops tucked near gardens These are among the more well off areas of Harare but not as wealthy as the North East Avondale Shopping Centre is the areas commercial heart noted for its theatres flea market and independent stores Mount Pleasant is home to the University of Zimbabwe the country s leading tertiary and research institution which gives the area an academic and bohemian atmosphere when school is in session Unfortunately a lack of funding from the government means that the area is unaffordable to students hindering the development of a true student ghetto as most students have to commute to Mount Pleasant due to a lack of student housing Another new building in Harare is the British Embassy built in 2008 and nearby Arundel office park houses the regional United Nations offices 46 The Northwest Edit Avondale Emerald Hill Avonlea Greencroft Mabelreign Malborough Saint Andrews Park WestgateThe city s North West is largely a leafy and residential upper middle class area best known for the outdoor mall at Westgate home to numerous independent stores movie theatres and other higher end shopping The area is also host to the new US embassy Also Saint Andrews Park is best known for the Warren Hills Golf Course as well as its proximity to the National Sports Stadium Nearby Emerald Hill is named so either due to the green colour of the hill due to the large number of trees or its Irish connections many of the roads in the suburb have Irish names such as Dublin Belfast Wicklow and Cork 46 The area is also notable for its Catholic institutions such as St John s High School and the Dominican Convent 47 While the area was home to an Irish Catholic community they have largely been assimilated into the larger white Zimbabwean community or have joined the ranks of the Zimbabwean diaspora abroad Other parts of the North West are leafy and quiet but have become slightly rough around the edges since the mid 2000s The country s economic crisis in that decade led to thousands of local university educated residents and professionals emigrating to the United Kingdom Canada and Australia thus the area lacks much of the wealth and vibrancy it had in the nineties 46 The East Edit Arcadia Braeside Hillside Belvedere Greendale St Martins Newlands ArlingtonNotable suburbs include Arcadia Hillside and Braeside renowned for their historic Goffal Coloured Zimbabwean communities and Belvedere and Greendale noted for their Asian residents of Indian descent Newlands was named by Colin Duff the secretary for Agriculture in the 1920s who had played for Western Cape Province before heading north When Gerhardt Van der Byl retired back to the Cape Town in 1927 he sold his farm Welmoed to the Salisbury Real Estate Co a property vehicle owned largely by Scots Arlington is a newer residential settlement east of the capital adjacent to Harare International Airport Owned by former mayor of Salisbury Mayor Brown named his farm Arlington He was from Iowa and joined occupational forces to collect specimens for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D C 40 The Industrial South Central Edit Workington Southerton Willowvale Graniteside TynwaldHarare s big factories are here producing clothing soft drinks bricks and vehicles Once home to Southern European immigrants of Greek Italian and Portuguese extraction most residents today are working and lower middle class Shona people and the descendants of Zambian Mozambique and Malawian immigrants 48 49 Willowvale is perhaps best known for the 1988 Willowgate scandal implicated several members of the ZANU PF party in a scheme where automobiles were illegally resold by various government officials The High Density Southwest Edit Dzivarasekwa Warren Park Kuwadzana Mufakose Budiriro Highfield Glen View WaterfallsThese areas are a mixture of medium and high density areas rarely visited by outsiders Houses are generally smaller and more tightly packed together Some of these townships were initially set up by the city government from the 1930s onwards Highfield is second oldest high density suburb in Harare was established in 1930 46 It was established for black settlement during the United Federal Party government of Godfrey Huggins 48 Highfield was primarily set up by the colonial Government to provide labour to the Southerton and Workington industrial areas Residents are mainly poor and working class although there are more lower middle class members who have bigger properties the townships are varied and each has its own personality and were home to famous musicians such as Oliver Mtukudzi and Thomas Mapfumo They are also home to a number of small industries however the region also has the highest unemployment and poverty rate in the city The poor state of the area has been exacerbated by neglect from city government leading to a lack of adequate electric water and sanitary services in the area These poor conditions have led to many former residents to choose to move south to Johannesburg and other cities in South Africa but they are quickly replaced by the internal migration of rural Zimbabweans seeking opportunity in the city 46 Climate Edit Jacaranda trees in Montagu Ave Salisbury in 1975 Under the Koppen climate classification Harare has a subtropical highland climate Koppen Cwb an oceanic climate variety Because the city is situated on a plateau its high altitude and cool south easterly airflow cause it to have a climate that is cooler and drier than a tropical or subtropical climate The average annual temperature is 17 95 C 64 3 F rather low for the tropics This is due to its high altitude position and the prevalence of a cool south easterly airflow 50 There are three main seasons a warm wet summer from November to March April a cool dry winter from May to August corresponding to winter in the Southern Hemisphere and a warm to hot dry season in September October Daily temperature ranges are about 7 22 C 45 72 F in July the coldest month about 15 29 C 59 84 F in October the hottest month and about 16 26 C 61 79 F in January midsummer The hottest year on record was 1914 with 19 73 C 67 5 F and the coldest year was 1965 with 17 13 C 62 8 F The average annual rainfall is about 825 mm 32 5 in in the southwest rising to 855 mm 33 7 in on the higher land of the northeast from around Borrowdale to Glen Lorne Very little rain typically falls during the period May to September although sporadic showers occur most years Rainfall varies a great deal from year to year and follows cycles of wet and dry periods from 7 to 10 years long Records begin in October 1890 but all three Harare stations stopped reporting in early 2004 51 The climate supports a natural vegetation of open woodland The most common tree of the local region is the Msasa Brachystegia spiciformis that colours the landscape wine red with its new leaves in late August Two introduced species of trees the jacaranda and the flamboyant from South America and Madagascar respectively which were introduced during the colonial era contribute to the city s colour palette with streets lined with either the lilac blossoms of the jacaranda or the flame red blooms from the flamboyant They flower in October November and are planted on alternative streets in the capital Also prevalent is bougainvillea Some trees from Northern Hemisphere middle latitudes are also cultivated including American sweetgum English oak Japanese oak and Spanish oak 52 Climate data for Harare 1961 1990 extremes 1897 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 33 9 93 0 35 0 95 0 32 3 90 1 32 0 89 6 30 0 86 0 27 7 81 9 28 8 83 8 31 0 87 8 35 0 95 0 36 7 98 1 35 3 95 5 33 5 92 3 36 7 98 1 Average high C F 26 2 79 2 26 0 78 8 26 2 79 2 25 6 78 1 23 8 74 8 21 8 71 2 21 6 70 9 24 1 75 4 28 4 83 1 28 8 83 8 27 6 81 7 26 3 79 3 25 5 77 9 Daily mean C F 21 0 69 8 20 7 69 3 20 3 68 5 18 8 65 8 16 1 61 0 13 7 56 7 13 4 56 1 15 5 59 9 18 6 65 5 20 8 69 4 21 2 70 2 20 9 69 6 18 4 65 1 Average low C F 15 8 60 4 15 7 60 3 14 5 58 1 12 5 54 5 9 3 48 7 6 8 44 2 6 5 43 7 8 5 47 3 11 7 53 1 14 5 58 1 15 5 59 9 15 8 60 4 12 3 54 1 Record low C F 9 6 49 3 8 0 46 4 7 5 45 5 4 7 40 5 2 8 37 0 0 1 32 2 0 1 32 2 1 1 34 0 4 1 39 4 5 1 41 2 6 1 43 0 10 0 50 0 0 1 32 2 Average precipitation mm inches 190 8 7 51 176 3 6 94 99 1 3 90 37 2 1 46 7 4 0 29 1 8 0 07 2 3 0 09 2 9 0 11 6 5 0 26 40 4 1 59 93 2 3 67 182 7 7 19 840 6 33 09 Average precipitation days 17 14 10 5 2 1 0 1 1 5 10 16 82Average relative humidity 76 77 72 67 62 60 55 50 45 48 63 73 62Mean monthly sunshine hours 217 0 190 4 232 5 249 0 269 7 264 0 279 0 300 7 294 0 285 2 231 0 198 4 3 010 9Mean daily sunshine hours 7 0 6 8 7 5 8 3 8 7 8 8 9 0 9 7 9 8 9 2 7 7 6 4 8 2Source 1 World Meteorological Organization 53 NOAA sun and mean temperature 1961 1990 54 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst humidity 1954 1975 55 Meteo Climat record highs and lows 56 International venue EditHarare has been the location of several international summits such as the 8th Summit of the Non Aligned Movement 6 September 1986 and Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1991 57 The latter produced the Harare Declaration dictating the membership criteria of the Commonwealth In 1998 Harare was the host city of the 8th Assembly of the World Council of Churches 58 In 1995 Harare hosted most of the sixth All Africa Games sharing the event with other Zimbabwean cities such as Bulawayo and Chitungwiza It has hosted some of the matches of 2003 Cricket World Cup which was hosted jointly by Kenya South Africa and Zimbabwe Several of the matches were also held in Bulawayo Harare also hosted the ICC Cricket 2018 World Cup Qualifier matches in March 2018 59 The city is also the site of one of the Harare International Festival of the Arts HIFA which has featured such acclaimed artists as Cape Verdean singer Sara Tavares 60 Economy EditHarare is Zimbabwe s leading financial commercial and communications centre as well as an international trade centre for tobacco maize cotton and citrus fruits Manufacturing including textiles steel and chemicals are also economically significant as is the trade of precious minerals such as gold diamonds chrome and platinum It has also experienced a real estate boom recently particularly in the wealthy Northern suburbs with prices rising dramatically over the last decade despite challenges in other sectors of the economy 61 This boom has largely been fueled by members of the Zimbabwean diaspora and speculation with investors hedging against the local currency 61 30 However the once booming market has begun to cool off due to a 2019 hike in interest rates and the economic fallout from the COVID 19 pandemic leaving a number of projects unfinished 62 Harare has been the location of several international summits such as the 8th Summit of the Non Aligned Movement 6 September 1986 and Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1991 57 The latter produced the Harare Declaration dictating the membership criteria of the Commonwealth In 1998 Harare was the host city of the 8th Assembly of the World Council of Churches 58 While it may have seemed the economy was finally making a recovery early investor optimism following the inauguration of the Mnangagwa government has largely subsided due to the slow pace of reforms to improve the business environment 63 The economy suffered high inflation and frequent power outages in 2019 which further hampered investment A lack of implementation of adequate monetary reforms to complement the government s efforts to reduce the budget deficit also undermined investor confidence in the financial sector Although the government has repeatedly stressed its focus on improving transparency the ease of doing business and fighting corruption progress remains limited under the Mnangagwa administration 63 Another challenge to Harare s economy is the persistent emigration of highly educated and skilled residents to the United Kingdom Australia Canada the Ireland and New Zealand largely due to the economic downturn and political unrest 64 The city s brain drain almost unprecedented compared to other emerging markets has led to the decline of a local entrepreneurial class an overstretched and declining middle class and a dearth of employment opportunities outside the informal and public sector 64 In addition the city s working class residents are increasingly moving to nearby South Africa and Botswana though they are readily replaced by less well off rural migrants 65 However despite over a decade of neglect the city s infrastructure and human capital still compares favorably with cities in other parts of Africa and Latin America It remains to be seen whether the current government can entice its young diverse and well educated Zimbabwean diaspora numbering some 4 to 7 million people to invest in the economy let alone consider returning 66 64 67 Shopping and retail Edit Locally produced art handicrafts and souvenirs can be purchased at Doon Estate Uwminsdale Avondale Market and Mbare Musika Msasa Park and Umwinsdale in particular host a number of galleries that produce high quality Shona soapstone sculptures and textiles such as Patrick Mavros studios which has another gallery in Knightsbridge London 68 International brands are generally less common in Harare than in European cities however conventional and luxury shopping can be found on Fife Avenue Sam Nujoma Union Avenue Arundel Village Avondale Borrowdale Eastgate and Westgate 69 Virtually all luxury shopping is concentrated in the wealthier Northern suburbs particularly Borrowdale with stores that command higher prices than most visitors would expect The Borrowdale and Borrowdale Brooke neighborhoods are regarded among the most sophisticated places in town with upscale shopping restaurants and amenities 70 71 Harare also has a good choice of supermarkets including Le Bon Marche Pick n Pay TM and Spar Greater variety and independent stores tend to be concentrated in the North Northeast and Northwest suburbs along with surprisingly Newlands and Greendale Avenue in Greendale 70 Transportation Edit Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport Harare is a relatively young city which sprawled during the country s post Federation and post independence booms and was segregated along racial and class lines until 1980 resulting in a mostly low density urban area geared towards private motorists lacking a convenient public transportation system 72 Very little investment has been made to develop an effective and integrated public transportation system leaving a significant number of the city s residents dependent on the city s informal minibus taxis 72 The rise of local ridesharing apps such as GTaxi and Hwindi has partly eased pressure on the city s transportation system however they are still prices out of the range of most working people 73 In addition bus services are also available but they are mostly geared towards intercity travel and recreation than journeys within Harare itself Public transport system within the city includes both public and private sector operations The former consist of ZUPCO buses and National Railways of Zimbabwe commuter trains Privately owned public transport comprised licensed station wagons nicknamed emergency taxis until 1993 when the government began to replace them with licensed buses and minibuses referred to officially as commuter omnibuses 74 Harare has two kinds of taxis metered taxis and the much more ubiquitous share taxis or kombis Unlike many other cities metered taxis generally do not drive around the city looking for passengers and instead must be called and ordered to a destination The minibus taxis are the de facto day to day and essential form of transport for the majority of the population 75 The National Railways of Zimbabwe operates a daily overnight passenger train service that runs from Harare to Mutare and another one from Harare to Bulawayo using the Beira Bulawayo railway 76 Harare is linked by long distance bus services to most parts of Zimbabwe The city is crossed by Transafrican Highway 9 TAH 9 which connects it to the cities of Lusaka and Beira The largest airport of the country the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport serves Harare Education EditThe University of Zimbabwe is located in Harare Founded in 1952 the university is the country s oldest and largest offering a wide range of undergraduate and postgraduate programs The student population stands at 20 399 with 17 718 undergraduate students and 2 681 postgraduate students 77 Sports Edit Kirsty Coventry former Olympian and current Minister of Sport Harare has long been regarded as Zimbabwe s sporting capital due to the role it has played in the development of Zimbabwean sport the range and quality of its sporting events and venues and its high rates of spectatorship and participation 78 The city is also home to more professional sports teams competing at the national and international level than any other Zimbabwean city Football is most popular sport in Harare with the city producing many footballers who have gone on to play in the English Premier League and elsewhere Harare is also home to Harare Sports Club ground which hosts many Test One Day Internationals and T20I Cricket matches It was also the one of the host cities for the 2003 Cricket World Cup Harare is home to the Zimbabwe Premier Soccer League clubs Dynamos F C Black Rhinos F C and CAPS United F C 79 The main stadiums are National Sports Stadium and Rufaro Stadium Popular teams Edit The following table shows the sports teams in the Harare area sorted primarily by attendance in the most recent season for which data is available Club Sport League Founded Venue CapacityDynamos F C Association football ZPSL 1963 a Rufaro Stadium Mbare Harare 40 00CAPS United F C Association football ZPSL 1973 a National Sports Stadium Harare 60 000Old Georgians Rugby Union SSRL 1926 a Harare Sports Club 10 000Old Hararians Rugby Union SSRL 1898 a Harare Sports Club 10 000Black Rhinos F C Association football ZPSL 1983 Figaro Stadium 17 544Mashonaland Eagles Cricket Logan Cup 2009 a Harare Sports club 10 000Old Miltonians Rugby Union SSRL 1910 a Harare Sports Club 10 000 a b c d e f Year team moved to Salisbury Football and cricketFootball is the most popular sport in Harare particularly among working class residents Cricket and rugby are also popular sports with those from middle class backgrounds Harare is home to Harare Sports Club ground It has hosted many Test One Day Internationals and T20 Cricket matches 80 The city successfully hosted most of the sixth All Africa Games and several matches in the 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup at Harare Sports Club Harare is also home to the Zimbabwe Premier Soccer League clubs Dynamos F C Harare City Black Rhinos F C and CAPS United F C 79 The main football stadiums are National Sports Stadium and Rufaro Stadium Virtually all first class and international cricket matches are hosted at Harare Sports Club with most domestic tours occurring in spring and summer This city is also home to the Mashonaland Eagles in the domestic Logan Cup tournament The Eagles are coached by renowned former Zimbabwe national cricket team batsman Grant Flower 81 The team are one of the country s strongest sides and last won the Logan Cup in the 2015 16 Logan Cup season 80 RugbyThe city is also the heartland of rugby union in Zimbabwe rivaling Windhoek in Namibia as the strongest rugby region in Africa beyond South Africa The governing Rhodesia Rugby Football Union was founded here in 1895 becoming the Zimbabwe Rugby Union in 1980 The union and national sides are based in the northern suburb of Alexandra Park 82 Harare is home to four of the country s national Super Six Rugby League SSRL clubs Harare Sports Club Old Georgians Old Hararians and Old Miltonians 83 Additionally the Zimbabwe Rugby Academy the national development side which plays in the second division of the Currie Cup is largely made up of players from the city International rugby test matches tend to be hosted at Harare Sports Club the Police Grounds and at Hartsfield in Bulawayo with a particularly strong rivalry with the Namibia national rugby union team Traditionally the city hosted tours by the British and Irish Lions Argentina and the All Blacks on their respective tours of South Africa however this is no longer the case due to the end of traditional rugby tours and the Zimbabwe national rugby union team s decline in the international rugby rankings 84 Indeed Wales were the last major country to tour Harare back in 1993 85 High school teams are generally of a high standard with Prince Edward School St George s College St John s College all ranking among the country s leading teams and sending their first XV sides to compete against well known South African high schools during Craven Week 84 Unfortunately after high school the city s best players tend to move on to South Africa or the United Kingdom due to a lack of professionalism and greater educational and earning opportunities abroad thus depleting the strength of the rugby union in Zimbabwe 86 Notable internationals hailing from Harare include Tendai Mtawarira Don Armand and Brian Mujati amongst numerous others 87 Media EditHarare is host to some of Zimbabwe s leading media outlets Despite accusations of government censorship and intimidation the city maintains a robust press much of which is defiantly critical of the current government 88 In print media the most famous paper internationally is the Herald the city s oldest newspaper founded in 1893 and former paper of record prior to its purchase by the government The paper is best noted for its heavy censorship during the Rhodesian Front government from 1962 to 1979 with many of its articles appearing as redacted with black boxes marking the words removed by government censors before its forced purchase 89 Today it is largely seen as little more than a government mouthpiece by residents and overwhelmingly supports the government line 90 In contrast private newspapers continue to adopt a more independent line and enjoy a more diverse and vibrant readership unmatched by most other African cities These include the Financial Gazette the high brow financial paper of record nicknamed the Pink Press for its tradition of printing on a pink broadsheet Other newspapers are the Zimbabwe Independent a centre left newspaper and de facto paper of record noted for its investigative journalism the Standard a centre left Sunday paper NewsDay a left wing tabloid H Metro a mass market tabloid the Daily News a left wing opposition paper and Kwayedza the leading Shona language newspaper in Zimbabwe 90 Online media outlets include ZimOnline ZimDaily the Zimbabwe Guardian and NewZimbabwe com amongst others 91 92 89 Television and radio Edit The state owned ZBC TV maintains a monopoly on free to air TV channels in the city with private broadcasters such as the defunct Joy TV coming and going based on the whims of the government 93 As a response the majority of the households that can afford to subscribe to the satellite television distributor DStv for entertainment news and sport from Africa and abroad Harare is also well served by radio with a number of the country s leading radio stations maintaining a presence in the city There are currently four state controlled Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corp channels SFM Radio Zimbabwe Power FM and National FM and private national commercial free to air stations Star FM Capital 100 4 FM and ZiFM In addition Channel Zim an alternative satellite channel and VOA Zimbabwe also broadcast via inexpensive free to air decoders 94 Eight newly licensed local commercial stations have been commissioned but were not yet on air as of 2020 94 Commercial stations tend to show similar trends in programming with high percentages of music talk radio or phone in programs and sports over infrequent news bulletins Also despite the country s 16 official languages virtually all broadcasts occur in English Shona and Ndebele 94 Notable institutions Edit44 Harvest House Eastgate Centre Econet Wireless Gwanzura Joina City Mbare Musika Parirenyatwa Hospital Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Sam Nujoma Street Zimbabwe Stock ExchangeCulture Edit National Gallery of Zimbabwe The arts are thriving in Harare despite an economic and political crisis whose effects have offered opportunities for satire experimentation and reinvention While authors and musicians such as Doris Lessing Petina Gappah and Thomas Mapfumo have been long criticized the corruption and shortcomings of the Smith and Mugabe governments the emergence of protest and critical theatre since 2000 has invigorated the local arts scene 95 Actors directors and artists have joined musicians and writers in criticizing political maleficence and audiences have rallied behind them making the local theatre and art scene one of the most vibrant in the southern hemisphere 96 Notable institutions in the city include National Gallery of Zimbabwe home to displays of Shona art and stone sculpture Heroes Acre Heroes Acre is a burial ground and national monument whose purpose is to commemorate pro independence fighters killed during the Rhodesian Bush War and also contemporary Zimbabweans whose service to their country justifies their burial at the site Zimbabwe Museum of Human Sciences near Rotten Row documents the archaeology of Southern Africa through the Stone Age into the Iron Age Chapungu Sculpture Park a sculpture park in Msasa Park which displays the work of Zimbabwean stone sculptors It was founded in 1970 by Roy Guthrie who was instrumental in promoting the work of its sculptors worldwide National Archives The second floor Gallery has a small but comprehensive display of some of the artefacts relating to Zimbabwe which are insightful for understanding its history These include newspapers photographs other artefacts which detail milestones in Zimbabwean history while the display on the mezzanine floor concentrates on the first Chimurenga or Ndebele Shona revolts of 1896 97 which puts into perspective the historical struggle for independence 97 National Botanical Gardens in Alexandra Park is a good place to visit for a walk or to see Zimbabwe or Southern African plants and woodland habitats such as the msasa miombo or less commonly the Cape fynbos Royal Harare Golf Course an 18 hole championship course which also hosts the Zimbabwe Open each year part of the Sunshine Tour the fairways are set in msasa woodland with occasional antelope feeding on the grass Vaughn Animal Sanctuary along Shamva and Enterprise Roads and home lions vervet monkeys and hyenas Epworth Balancing Rocks just south out of the city limits is home to large extraordinary rock formations and ancient rock art friezes Cleveland Dam Recreational Park on the Mutare highway A3 magnificent msasa woodland bordering the edges of the dam and pretty views onto the Dam We spotted cormorants and herons as well as a water monitor or leguaan and vervet monkeys Best avoided at weekends Ewanrigg Botanical Gardens Lion and Cheetah Park although there are few cheetahs presently if you have only a few days in Harare or have never seen a live lion then the Park is worth a visit as it is close to town on the Bulawayo Road A5 Mukuvisi Woodlands in Hillside comprises 263 hectares of indigenous Msasa and Miombo woodland are very conveniently located for an initial introduction to Zimbabwe s game life It hosts zebra giraffe eland wildebeest ostrich and impala including some of their young born within woodlands as well as a wide variety of birdlife and indigenous flora 98 The Eastgate Centre a pioneering and innovatively designed shopping mall equidistant from Unity Square and Borrowdale Mbare Musika market the city s largest and most colourful market has a heady mix of fresh produce local art and assorted goods It s the curios that attract tourists here there is a big collection of neo traditional sculpture wooden crafts and basketry It is located in a poorer section of the city and pickpockets are rife so it is best visited with a tour group 98 The Book Cafe a bohemian hub of literary social and musical discussion where writers poets singers and other artists perform without censorship Reps Theatre in Belgravia hosts a diverse range performances ranging from classical music to improvisational and experimental theater 97 Places of worship EditAmong the places of worship they are predominantly Christian churches and temples Assemblies of God Baptist Convention of Zimbabwe Baptist World Alliance Reformed Church in Zimbabwe World Communion of Reformed Churches Church of the Province of Central Africa Anglican Communion Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Harare Catholic Church 99 International relations EditHarare has co operation agreements and partnerships with the following towns 100 Cincinnati United States 101 Guangzhou China 102 Kazan Russia Lago Italy Maputo Mozambique 103 Munich Germany Nakhon Ratchasima Thailand Nottingham United Kingdom Prato Italy Windhoek NamibiaGallery Edit Sam Nujoma Street view south Anglican Cathedral of St Mary and All Saints Downtown Harare Reserve Bank ahead First Street Along parliament buildings Harare Central Station Eastgate centre Relief at National Heroes Acre National Heroes AcreSee also EditDistricts of Zimbabwe Place names in Zimbabwe Provinces of ZimbabweReferences Edit a b Zimstat 2012 Population Census National Report PDF Retrieved 20 September 2020 a b Zimstat 2019 Labour Force Report PDF Retrieved 20 September 2020 Zimstat 2012 Population Report Harare PDF Retrieved 20 September 2020 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 20 September 2020 Harare Retrieved 25 May 2015 Names Alteration Act Chapter 10 14 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 December 2013 Harare Provincial Profile PDF Report Parliament Research Department 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 3 July 2013 Retrieved 22 November 2013 Abu Hassan Abu Bakar Arman Abd Razak Shardy Abdullah and Aidah Awang PROJECT MANAGEMENT SUCCESS FACTORS FOR SUSTAINABLE HOUSING A FRAMEWORK PDF School of Housing Building and Planning Universiti Sains Malaysia Pulau Pinang Malaysia Retrieved 3 March 2022 via eprints usm my a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Who we are www who int Retrieved 21 June 2021 Harare International Festival of the Arts HIFA www kadmusarts com Retrieved 21 June 2021 Hoste Skipper 1977 N S Davies ed Gold Fever Salisbury Rhodesia Pioneer Head ISBN 0 86918 013 4 Roman Adrian Cybriwsky Capital Cities around the World An Encyclopedia of Geography History and Culture ABC CLIO USA 2013 p 120 Horace A Laffaye Polo in Britain A History Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company 2012 p 76 Britannica Harare britannica com USA accessed on 7 July 2019 Journal of Frederick Courtney Selous Rhodesiana Reprint Library Salisbury 1969 a b c https radar brookes ac uk radar file 40aeba0f dc35 4096 b213 447328c254db 1 Harare 20 202017 20 20Mbiba pdf bare URL PDF Room Adrian 2003 Placenames of the World Origins and Meanings of the Names for Over 5000 Natural Features Countries Capitals Territories Cities and Historic Sights McFarland ISBN 9780786418145 kdc The Zimbabwe Situation zimbabwesituation com Sinoski Kelly Vancouver world s most livable city Harare the worst Poll Calgary Herald The Vancouver Sun Archived from the original on 11 June 2009 Retrieved 8 June 2009 Least livable cities Reuters Reuters Retrieved 19 August 2016 Zimbabwe Rhodesia and the UDI Encyclopedia Britannica Joina City Harare s New Pride Inside Joina City Facts amp Figures Urbika com 31 March 2010 Archived from the original on 20 June 2013 Retrieved 17 June 2013 Joina City Occupancy 3pc ForBuilder 16 October 2011 Archived from the original on 9 September 2013 Moyo Jason 31 May 2013 Zimbabwe s Changing Spaces Mail and Guardian Retrieved 17 June 2013 Koranyi Balazs 21 February 2011 Vancouver still world s most livable city survey Reuters Retrieved 28 September 2012 The Economist Intelligence Unit August 2012 Liveabililty Ranking and Overview August 2012 Report Retrieved 17 June 2013 Madalitso Mwando 27 March 2015 Zimbabwe Capital Turns to Solar Streetlights to Cut Costs Crime allAfrica com Thomson Reuters Foundation Retrieved 28 March 2015 Zimbabwe crowds rejoice as they demand end to Mugabe rule BBC News Zimbabwe leader Mugabe under house arrest as army tightens grip on capital Market Watch a b c McGregor JoAnn September 2014 Sentimentality or speculation Diaspora investment crisis economies and urban transformation Geoforum 56 172 181 doi 10 1016 j geoforum 2014 07 008 Staff Writer A look at Zimbabwe s property market Zimbabwe property market characterised by a high demand and low supply www iol co za a b c Standard The Why property is more pricey in Zim than SA The Standard The World According to GaWC 2020 GaWC Research Network Globalization and World Cities Retrieved 31 August 2020 Current Africanist Research International Bulletin La Recherche Africaniste en Cours Bulletin International International African Institute Research Information Liaison Unit pg 367 TV Bulpin Discovering South Africa pp 838 https esdac jrc ec europa eu images Eudasm Africa images maps download afr zw2006 so jpg Provisional Soil Map of Zimbabwe Rhodesia Mugabe s Borrowdale Brooke neighbour speaks out 22 June 2014 a b c Matamanda Abraham R 2020 Mugabe s Urban Legacy A Postcolonial Perspective on Urban Development in Harare Zimbabwe Journal of Asian and African Studies 56 4 804 817 doi 10 1177 0021909620943620 ISSN 0021 9096 S2CID 225530172 a b thephraser 5 March 2017 Five days in the suburbs of Harare capital of Zimbabwe The Phraser Retrieved 25 November 2020 Page Kogan Kogan 2003 Africa Review 200 Op 075 ISBN 9780749440657 Zimbabwe displays Biblical Ark 18 February 2010 Retrieved 25 November 2020 a b Herald The Inside Rotten Row Court 6 The Herald Retrieved 25 November 2020 History and Architecture The Royal Parks Retrieved 25 November 2020 Kola F T 19 November 2016 Rotten Row by Petina Gappah review buzzing with Zimbabwe life The Guardian Retrieved 25 November 2020 a b c d e f g h Of suburb names and colonial hangover Celebrating Being Zimbabwean www thepatriot co zw old posts of suburb names and colonial hangover a b Mlambo Alois S 2019 Racism in Colonial Zimbabwe In Ratuva Steven ed The Palgrave Handbook of Ethnicity Springer Nature pp 1 17 doi 10 1007 978 981 13 0242 8 28 1 ISBN 978 981 13 0242 8 S2CID 167028880 McEwan Peter J M 1963 The European Population of Southern Rhodesia Civilisations 13 4 429 444 JSTOR 41230768 Average for years 1965 1995 Goddard Institute of Space Studies World Climate database Global Historic Climate Network database NGDC https www goldenstairsnursery co zw Golden permanent dead link Stairs Nursery World Weather Information Service Harare World Meteorological Organization Retrieved 10 June 2016 Harare Kutsaga Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 10 June 2016 Klimatafel von Harare Kutsaga Salisbury Simbabwe PDF Baseline climate means 1961 1990 from stations all over the world in German Deutscher Wetterdienst Retrieved 10 June 2016 Station Harare in French Meteo Climat Retrieved 10 June 2016 a b List of previous CHOGMS Archived from the original on 31 October 2008 a b 8th assembly amp 50th anniversary Retrieved 25 May 2015 ICC World Cup Qualifiers 2018 Super Sixes Match 8 Zimbabwe v United Arab Emirates Preview Cricket World What s Next reflecting a sense of positive progress hifa co zw Archived from the original on 26 June 2013 Retrieved 6 June 2013 a b Dzirutwe MacDonald 15 May 2006 Zimbabweans ask who can afford houses Published 2006 The New York Times Policy flip flopping crippling real estate the Zimbabwe Independent Archived from the original on 27 November 2020 Retrieved 19 November 2020 a b Zimbabwe United States Department of State Retrieved 21 January 2021 a b c The Engagement of the Zimbabwean Medical Diaspora PDF samponline org Retrieved 21 January 2021 Unfriendly Neighbours PDF samponline org Retrieved 21 January 2021 Zimbabwe s exodus to australia PDF samponline org 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Zimbabwe Migration and Brain Drain ResearchGate Pikirayi Innocent 2006 The Kingdom the Power and Forevermore Zimbabwe Culture in Contemporary Art and Architecture Journal of Southern African Studies 32 4 755 770 doi 10 1080 03057070600995681 JSTOR 25065149 S2CID 145351878 Harare capital of Zimbabwe Zimbabwe Field Guide zimfieldguide com a b The Village Walk Borrowdale My Guide Zimbabwe 12 October 2020 Arundel Village Arundel Village a b Getting Around With Kids When Even the Grocery Store Is an Onerous Journey Bloomberg com 7 January 2019 Retrieved 25 November 2020 Transportation in Harare Zimbabwe Lonely Planet Retrieved 25 November 2020 D A C Maunder and T C Mbara The initial effects of introducing commuter omnibus services in Harare Zimbabwe TRL The Future of Transport 123 January 1995 ISBN 1 84608 122 X and https trl co uk reports TRL123 A look At Public Transportation In Zimbabwe 16 February 2020 Mlambo Alois 2003 Bulawayo Zimbabwe In Paul Tiyambe Zeleza Dickson Eyoh eds Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century African History Routledge ISBN 0415234794 University of Zimbabwe Profile www uz ac zw Retrieved 3 November 2021 Sport in Zimbabwe www topendsports com Retrieved 21 June 2021 a b Harare among world s worst cities to live in DailyNews Live Retrieved 2 August 2018 a b My family s love affair with Zimbabwe and the Harare Sports Club ESPNcricinfo Importance of counties Zimbabwe tours cannot be overstated Hamilton Masakadza ESPNcricinfo World Rugby www world rugby Zim rugby league suspended 25 April 2019 a b Herald The Rugby s forgetable year The Herald Wild times in Zimbabwe and Namibia Welsh Rugby Union Wales amp Regions Long Read Rugby in post colonial Zimbabwe New Frame 11 March 2020 If you lived in bitterness you wouldn t enjoy anything Exeter s Zimbabwean rugby exiles The Guardian 1 December 2017 Critics Decry Zimbabwe s Press Freedom Failures Voice of America English www voanews com a b Zimbabwe Online News amp the Internet Columbia University Libraries library columbia edu a b More newspapers hit the streets of Harare as Zimbabwe media industry opens up The National 1 July 2010 Muckraker The hunt for democracy in the land of despotism the Zimbabwe Independent Archived from the original on 2 April 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Zimbabwe news Stanford Libraries MuckRaker ZBC has taken over the RBC s mantle Zimbabwe Independent 16 February 2012 a b c Radio Stations in Zimbabwe My Guide Zimbabwe 24 July 2019 Rest in Power Oliver Mtukudzi music legend and pan African trailblazer 25 January 2019 Modern Sculptures from Zimbabwe Archived from the original on 23 November 2016 Retrieved 29 November 2020 a b Zimbabwe Education History amp Culture Columbia University Libraries library columbia edu a b Discover The Rich Zimbabwean Culture In Its Capital Harare Zimbabwe Activities Lonely Planet Britannica Zimbabwe britannica com USA accessed on 7 July 2019 Dhedheya Itai City of Harare Twinning Arrangements City of Harare Archived from the original on 15 April 2019 Retrieved 10 June 2017 Pennick Faith Calhoun Jim 5 August 1990 Harare newest link Cincinnati adds sister city in Africa The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved 21 May 2018 Harare twins Guangzhou The Herald 22 September 2015 Retrieved 23 May 2018 Kalayil Sheena 2 April 2015 The Beloved Country Grosvenor House Publishing p 29 ISBN 9781781484647 Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of HarareExternal links Edit Media related to Harare at Wikimedia Commons Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Harare Portal Africa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harare amp oldid 1131123394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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