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Slavery
has been 'legalised' say rights advocates
IRIN News
June 18, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72797
HARARE, 18 June
2007 (IRIN) - Slave wages and the deaths of about 10,000 Zimbabwean
farmworkers as a consequence of the government's land-redistribution
policy are some of the issues highlighted by rights groups in a
recent report published on the plight of the country's one million
farmworkers.
The change from predominantly
white farm owners to mainly black farmers brought about by the President
Robert Mugabe's fast-track land reform programme, launched in 2000,
had not improved the lot of farmworkers and was condemned by human
rights lawyers in a recent statement, 'The Legitimisation of Contemporary
Forms of Slavery - The Case of Farm Workers in Zimbabwe'.
"Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights [ZLHR] joins like-minded Zimbabweans
in condemning, in the strongest of terms, the treatment and conditions
which Zimbabwean farm workers have had to, and continue to, endure,"
the ZLHR said.
It called on the government
and farmers to "be cognisant of the harsh and ever-deteriorating
economic environment present, and the need for the workers to survive,"
a sentiment echoed by the General Agriculture and Plantation Workers
Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ).
"The main
problem is that farmworkers have, for a long time, been treated
with contempt by their employers. They are viewed as belonging to
rural areas whose people do not need much money to subsist, but
the bottom line is that they are workers just like those working
in offices, and deserve the respect due to employees," GAPWUZ
deputy secretary-general Gift Muti told IRIN.
Although GAPWUZ
secured a wage hike in May this year, most farm owners kept paying
their employees the old salaries. Under the new wage structures,
the highest paid farm workers, timber plantation workers, should
be paid a monthly wage of Z$300,000, (US$3.65 at the parallel market
exchange rate of Z$82,000 to US$1), those in horticulture should
be getting Z$200,000 (US$2.43), while general labourers involved
in the production of maize and wheat should earn Z$96,000 (US$1.17)
a month.
Less
than a dollar a month wages
In terms of the old salary
structure, which is still being adhered to, a general farm worker
earned Z$30,000 (US$0.36) a month - enough to buy two loaves of
bread at current prices - and far below the country's poverty datum
line, estimated at Z$3.5 million (US$43).
Zimbabwe's seven-year
recession has created an unemployment rate of 80 percent, and an
annual inflation rate of more than 3,700 percent - the highest in
the world.
Earlier this year farm
workers and a joint parliamentary committee on agriculture and labour
blamed the poor wages on the failure of GAPWUZ to sufficiently represent
their interests.
Mulandu Bauleni, 44,
who works on a maize and wheat farm in Mashonaland Central Province,
told IRIN: "In the last three years, we have not been visited
by any representatives of the unions and our views are never sought
when negotiations are being carried out. I fail to understand how
they can succeed in ensuring good wages for us when they don't understand
the plight we have."
Bauleni said his two
children were supposed to be in grade two and four respectively,
but were no longer in school because he could not afford to buy
their uniforms or pay the fees of Z$25,000 (US$0.30) per term.
"Sometimes I think
God has condemned us to a life of poverty. My parents were virtual
slaves on white men's farms before the blacks took over. Now it
seems worse for me, and I don't have any hope for my children or
their own offspring getting out of the trap," said Bauleni,
who was wearing tattered overalls, his only clothes.
'Life
is getting worse'
The farm Bauleni works
on was taken over by a senior government official of the ruling
ZANU-PF party in 2001. He is still living in a shack and the family
survives on two meals of maizemeal porridge per day, sometimes supplemented
by fish caught in the farm's dams or streams by his children.
Bauleni said his employer
had told them he would not adopt the May wage increases because
of the drought. "But that is a lie. His crops are irrigated
and the dam is half full, despite the poor rains. Besides, we have
helped him get high maize and wheat yields, and there is evidence
that he is getting lots of money from our sweat, since he has bought
a new car and two tractors."
On a nearby farm, Joyce
Muzondo, 30 and a single mother, said they worked long hours but
were not paid overtime and sometimes went for months without receiving
any wages.
The workers got no sick
or maternity leave and many were leaving farms in search of better
paying activities, such as illegal gold panning, beer brewing and
prostitution.
Samual Rundori, a tobacco
and maize farmer in Mashonaland Central Province, who was given
400 acres by the government in 2003, admitted that some new farmers
were treating their workers like captives, but defended the low
wages he was giving his employees.
"It should be realised
that, as new farmers, we are operating under difficult conditions.
Whereas the former commercial farmers had large pieces of land,
our plots are smaller and we don't have adequate infrastructure
for money-spinning farming," Rundori told IRIN.
"Besides, we are
finding it difficult to access loans from banks that require us
to produce collateral security, which we currently don't have, while
at the same time we have to repay the government for the inputs
it has been giving us."
The government began
issuing 99-year leases in 2006 and said farmers would be able to
use them as collateral, but most banks are rejecting them, arguing
that the leases don't guarantee repayment in the event of default
because the land remains state property.
10,000
farmworkers may have died
A report on
human rights violations incurred between 2000 and 2005, 'Injury
in addition to insult', by the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum and the Justice
for Agriculture Trust, both non-governmental organisations,
said the government's land-reform programme had cost the country
billions of US dollars, and as many as 10,000 farmworkers may have
died as a result of being displaced by farm invasions.
A survey examined 187
formerly white-owned commercial farms over a six-month period between
2006 and 2007, of which 94 percent had been parcelled out to new
owners.
Researchers found that
about one percent of displaced farmworkers and their family had
died, which, if "extrapolated to the entire population of one
million farmworkers and their families, 10,000 people could have
died after displacement from the farms."
The report estimated
that the total financial losses incurred by the commercial farming
sector as a result of the land redistribution amounted to US$8.4
billion and that about 1 in 12 Zimbabweans had suffered at least
one human rights violation, while "many experienced multiple
abuses".
The survey suggested
that "a plausible case can be made for crimes against humanity
having being committed during these displacements", and identified
the perpetrators as war veterans, ZANU-PF members and police officers,
as well as parliamentarians, officials from the presidency and other
government representatives.
"These finds point
to an organised seizure of land planned by officials, not a spontaneous
seizure carried out by landless blacks, as government claims,"
the report said.
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