12/02/2026
POLICE CORRUPTION At a Roadblock resulted in a ministerial visit following this viral Video. Zim Tourism Boss Barbara Rwodzi had to Step In as the Country Scrambles to Clean Its Image and Convince the World That Zimbabwe Is Truly a good tourist destination
What happens when a tourism operator speaks out publicly about alleged police corruption — and the whole region starts watching?
In an unexpected turn, the Minister of Tourism, paid a visit to Trans Africa Self Drive Adventures and Tours, following a widely shared video by its founder George, who accused police officers at roadblocks of selective targeting and questionable fines.
The video didn’t just trend — it embarrassed.
For years, travelers and self-drive tourists have quietly complained about harassment, roadblock shakedowns, and inconsistent enforcement. This time, the complaint had a face, a voice, and a growing audience across Southern Africa.
And suddenly, the silence broke.
Instead of dismissing the claims, Zimbabwe’s tourism leadership moved fast — very fast. Ministers’ representatives, senior officials, and directors were brought into the conversation. The message shifted from denial to damage control.
According to those present, the visit focused on reassuring operators, restoring confidence, and repeating a now-familiar slogan: Zimbabwe is open for business. Friends to all. Enemies to none.
But critics are asking the hard questions:
Would this visit have happened without the viral video?
How many operators complained quietly and were ignored?
Is tourism reform real — or reactive?
Supporters argue that this is exactly how leadership should respond: listen publicly, act visibly, and engage directly when problems surface.
Either way, the signal is loud.
Zimbabwe knows tourism is watching.
The region is watching.
Social media is watching.
Domestic tourists were praised.
International tourists were reassured.
Officials promised cooperation.
Now the public waits to see whether roadblock experiences will actually change — or if this was simply crisis management dressed as reform.
Because in tourism, perception is currency — and right now, Zimbabwe is fighting hard to protect it.
So where ever you are as a tourist Speak out.