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The
Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe (CFU) and its politics
after jambanja
Rory
Pilossof, Solidarity Peace Trust
December 02, 2010
Introduction
As a result of the government's fast-track
land reform programme, spearheaded by veterans of the country's
Liberation War, the plight of the white farmers in Zimbabwe became
international headline news. Images of white farmers who were beaten,
killed, exiled and driven from their homes became stock material
for any coverage on the land invasions and their dramatic consequences.
Such events and acts of eviction became commonly referred to as
jambanja as more and more farmers suffered violent confrontations
on their farms. In turn, white farmers were portrayed in direct
opposition to the government that they believed had sanctioned the
invasions and evictions. However, this blanket portrayal of opposition
is one that hides a number of more complicated dimensions to the
way farmers, and in particular the Commercial Farmers' Union
of Zimbabwe (CFU), engaged with the government and tried to find
solutions to the situation facing them. This paper looks at how
the Union reacted to the land reforms after 2000 in order to question
some of the more simplistic assumptions about white farmers'
political engagements after 2000 and how they responded to the traumas
of jambanja.
jambanja
While relations between white farmers and the government
benefited from a partnership of convenience in the 1980s, it has
been well documented elsewhere that during the 1990s such relations
began to cool dramatically. This was partly due to the expiration
of the Lancaster House constitution and ZANU-PF's initiatives
to effect compulsory acquisition of commercial farmland. In addition,
after the first decade of independence white farmers felt much more
confident of their position in Zimbabwe and were willing to challenge
government in ways they had not during the 1980s. However, the increasing
hostility of ZANU-PF in the late 1990s, which was exacerbated by
the rising popularity of the MDC, both in urban areas as well with
many rural black farm workers, meant that white farming communities
entered the new millennium in a cautions manner. Unsure of how the
land issue would play out, many farmers became active participants
in the political upheavals around them. Central to this was their
active lobbying for a No vote against ZANU-PF's constitutional
proposals in the constitutional referendum of 2000. The ruling party
saw this defeat as a direct affront to their continued rule and
feared the repercussions this would have for the general elections
due to be held later that year. ZANU-PF and Mugabe were not prepared
to chance another electoral setback so began a campaign of violence
and terror to ensure victory.
Due to their effort in this regard, ZANU-PF focused
much of their hostility on white farmers. Mugabe and other party
leaders 'blamed the defeat on the white minority and ... promised
retaliation in volatile political language'. While in the
urban areas there was a massive crackdown on the MDC and other opposition
movements, in the countryside, widespread and coordinated land occupations
began within a matter of weeks of the constitutional referendum.
The sequence of events since the constitutional referendum, and
the basic story of the land occupations will be familiar to most
readers. I will not repeat those events in detail here. Rather I
will supply a very cursory overview of the processes of jambanja,
which will be followed by a brief discussion of the political engagement
of white farmers since 2000.
In the last week of February 2000, the first occupations
were reported in Masvingo. From there occupations spread to Mashonaland
and Manicaland and 'involved not just veterans but also people
from communal areas, chiefs and urban residents. Mashonaland rapidly
came to the fore . . . and thereafter the region dominated in
terms of numbers of occupations and violence. Matabeleland only
later entered the fray'. It must be remembered that approximately
60% of commercial farmers operated in Mashonaland. At the forefront
of these land occupations were veterans of the Liberation War. However,
as Nelson Marongwe pointed out, it was very rare for the occupiers
to consist entirely of war veterans. By his estimates, war veterans
were only 15-20% of land occupiers and they were supported by numerous
other populations, such as those from communal lands, rural and
urban landless, other ZANU-PF supporters and various opportunists.
Nevertheless, war veterans became the figureheads of the movements
onto white land. Many of the occupations were peaceful, but some
were highly confrontational and violent.
The word, apparently popularised by a chart topping
song 'jambanja Pahotera' about two couples caught in
extra-martial affairs, became synonymous with the land invasions.
With no precise definition, the word was, and still is, used to
encompass a range of violent and angry confrontations on the land,
which varied in degree, severity and manner. The journalist Tagwirei
Bango summarised the zeitgeist of the word in the Daily News newspaper:
For new words to get accepted into a language, they
must reflect the mood of the time, fill in a vacuum in the standard
lexicon and be accepted as an appropriate form of expression. Thus,
the word jambanja which became part of our vocabulary in the past
two years, helped people to accept their confusion with an executive
order directing the police to ignore crimes classified as political.
jambanja means state-sponsored lawlessness. The police are not expected
to intervene or arrest anyone in a jambanja scene because those
taking part will have prior state blessing and approval. But, only
one interest group, war veterans and ZANU(PF) supporters, is allowed
to engage in a jambanja.
From these early jambanjas and land occupations,
there was substantial evidence that many were supported and coordinated
by government and state officials. Jocelyn Alexander and JoAnn McGregor
found that many of the war veterans occupying farms 'consistently
maintained that they had received direction from the national level
of their association regarding which farms to occupy'. Government
officials supplied lists of farms. In addition, army personnel,
members of the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) and police
were directly involved in some occupations, while local politicians
and their employees were often seen assisting "settlers"
to remain on the land with food handouts and cash payments. "Settler"
is a highly charged word in Zimbabwe because of its colonial legacies
and was deliberately employed by ZANU-PF to describe those whose
land was occupied as part of the fast-track land reforms. Its use
by ZANU-PF and the war veterans undermined the white farmers claims
to a settler heritage and past.
Since 2000 the countryside has remained a contested
space. The vast majority of white farmers and landowners have been
evicted from their homes and farms, yet while it is estimated that
fewer than 300 white commercial farmers remain on their land (down
from nearly 5,000 at the turn of the millennium), evictions and
violent confrontations on such properties have been a constant reality
over the last decade and continue to take place. The recent documentary
films Mugabe and the White African and House of Justice show that
even after a SADC Tribunal ruling in November 2008, ordering the
government of Zimbabwe to protect the applicants (in total 78 commercial
farmers) rights to occupy and use their farm, white farmers continue
to face the threat of violence and eviction. At every election in
Zimbabwe since independence, but particularly after 2000, land has
been a key focal point for ZANU-PF. With the possibility of fresh
elections to be held in 2011, it is likely that land, and its control
and ownership, will once again be used as a powerful election tool
by ZANU-PF.
Ramifications
of jambanja
Despite the scale of destruction wrought on the
white farming community, numerous institutional structures survive
that claim to represent white farmers. The Commercial Farmers'
Union of Zimbabwe (CFU), which was founded in 1942, (originally
the Rhodesian National Farmers' Union) and overwhelmingly
represented the interests of white commercial farmers, continues
to exist, although in a much depleted capacity. The tribulations
of the land occupations caused massive fissures in the farming community
as a range of different responses to the fast-track land reforms
and jambanja emerged. As a result, other bodies have materialised
since 2000 that have sought to represent white farmers in ways that
the CFU has not. These are the Southern African Commercial Farmers'
Association (SACFA, which was formed by white farmers in Matabeleland
to represent their interests after the land occupations in 2000),
Justice for Agriculture (JAG, which was established in 2002 to advocate
and lobby for white farmers who had been adversely affected by the
fast-track land reforms) and Agric Africa (which was established
in 2004 to pursue the compensation claims of white farmers).
Numerous factors were responsible for this fragmentation
of the white farming community. Firstly, the invasions had far exceeded
what farmers had expected was likely to happen. By the end of June
2000, the CFU reported that 1525 farms (or 28% of farms owned by
its members) had been occupied. Many in the farming community thought
that these land occupations would be resolved once the parliamentary
elections of 2000 were resolved. Richard Tate (the Zimbabwe Tobacco
Association President) reportedly stated in 2000, 'the sooner
the elections are over and ZANU is back in power, the sooner we
can get back to the business of farming'. However, the land
occupations did not stop and continued to escalate. jambanja turned
into a battle of attrition for many farmers as occupiers settled
on farms and constantly sought to interfere with farming operations.
Secondly, the ensuing invasions were highly uneven processes, differing
in nature from district to district, province to province and dependent
on the individuals involved. The murder of several farmers heightened
the anxieties, and prompted a number of farmers to ask for more
action and protection from the CFU for members affected by the land
occupations.
Understandably, 2000 was a very chaotic time for
the CFU to make sense of what was unfolding and in deciding what
the best strategy for confronting the issues were. Initially the
CFU was very active in documenting the land occupations and regularly
published situation reports of happenings on farms. In addition
it pursued several legal challenges against the fast-track land
reforms. But it soon became clear that the CFU was intent on taking
up a much more conciliatory approach to government and the war veterans.
Essentially the CFU decided that it would be best for the farming
community to revert back to its pre-referendum stance and stay out
of politics. Legal challenges were aborted and alternative arrangements
made. The Farmer magazine, which had been a part of the Union since
1943, was shut down in 2002 because it was felt that the reportage
in The Farmer was too explicit and politically involved. The CFU
feared that this would jeopardise any chance it had in negotiating
with government. In 2001, the Zimbabwe Joint Resettlement Initiative
(ZJRI), led by ex-CFU president Nick Swanepoel counselled that compromise
was the only way to resolve the land issues and proposed to offer
government a million hectares of land for resettlement. The proposal
had some merit, but when it came to light that the controversial
figure of John Bredenkamp was involved, many farmers refused to
support the initiative. This proposal never really took of the ground,
but the CFU maintained its placatory stance. In 2006 the CFU officially
announced that it would reengage with ZANU-PF, 'but warned
that it would only represent members willing to recognise the government'.
Large numbers
of farmers openly disagreed with the CFU's decision to keep
talking to government and the war veterans to find a solution, even
when it seemed obvious that neither of those parties respected any
promises or arrangements made. The government's disregard
of the Abuja Agreement and the recommendations of the ZJRI confirmed
such suspicions. As a result organisations such as JAG
and SACFA emerged to represent farmers who had been evicted and
who wished to continue pursuing legal and other challenges. JAG
in particular came to largely represent evicted farmers as it strove
to expose the illegal and unconstitutional nature of the land occupations.
However, these bodies have suffered their own internal divisions
and organisational difficulties and the future of JAG is a matter
of much debate at the moment as it seeks to resolve debilitating
leadership issues. Individual farmers have also continued to pursue
their own legal challenges. At the forefront of these was the appeal
taken to the SADC Tribunal by Mike Campbell in 2008. The resultant
victory there offered many farmers a glimmer of hope of resolution,
but the subsequent disregard of this ruling by ZANU-PF, in spite
of a contempt of court ruling by the SADC Tribunal in June 2009,
once again squashed any remaining optimism.
Despite the fragmentation of the farming community
and the multiple approaches taken to confront the crises in the
countryside, there has been one consistency in their approach. This
has been to remain apolitical. The backlash of the constitutional
referendum and the obvious targeting of farmers supportive of the
MDC saw many farmers retreat from the political arena. While certain
individual farmers have remained politically active and advocate
political solutions, such as Iain Kay, Roy Bennett and Ben Freeth,
the institutional approaches of the CFU have been remarkably different.
Even JAG's constitution dictated that it remained apolitical,
despite the nature of the work it claimed to undertake. For these
institutions, and large numbers of farmers, the land was the single
origin of the crises affecting Zimbabwe after 2000, and their failure
to realize the multiple origins of the crisis further alienated
them from much of society.
There were and are numerous civic and political
organizations engaged with opposing Mugabe and ZANU-PF. These groups
have often sought to forge alliances with institutions like the
CFU and JAG, but all of these advances have been refused. In accordance
with this approach, the CFU has recently started to publish a new
farming magazine, titled AgriZim, dedicated to 'farming matters'
only. The lack of critical reflection of the situation in Zimbabwe
or any political commentary in this magazine has already attracted
criticism from evicted farmers such as Ben Freeth. In a recent letter
to the JAG Open Letter Forum, Freeth commented that, 'Anyone
reading the magazine who didn't know, would be reassured that
farming is all now fine in Zimbabwe now that we are under a GNU
[Government of National Unity]. The ZANU PF . . . leadership must
be rubbing their hands in glee at this "official publication
of the Commercial Farmers Union"'.
This apparent apoliticism is not a new feature of
white farming politics, but has been a part of the political identity
of this group throughout independent Zimbabwe. This is illustrated
by the wholesale withdrawal of farmers from active party politics
during the first two decades of independence. This withdrawal was
contradicted by the CFU's blanket endorsement of ZANU after
independence, regardless of the government's abuses that made
themselves increasingly obvious as the 1980s progressed. Aligning
themselves with the government was not seen by the CFU as a political
move and can be regarded as a survival tactic employed by an insecure
and threatened white minority. Even though the CFU claimed to be
apolitical, many of the decisions it took during the 1980s where
politically calculated. For instance, the CFU actively defended
the government's actions in Matabeleland. During the years
of Gukurahundi, the CFU praised government in its efforts to restore
'order' and 'security' in the region. The
CFU, and white farmers in general, steadfastly refused to question
or criticise government's political motives for the crackdown
in Matabeleland in order to preserve their own fragile partnership
with ZANU and Mugabe. White farmers were willing to remain "apolitical"
as long as their futures and livelihoods were not jeopardised. When
Mugabe and ZANU-PF began to target white owned land in the 1990s,
white farmers rediscovered their political voice. The problem with
the CFU's apoliticism was that it essentially boiled down
to 'support for the government in return for continuing privileges
really amounted to political advocacy for the ruling party and was
certainly a conscious strategy'.
By defining themselves as apolitical, white farmers
assumed a position and a citizenship (right to be Zimbabwean) that
they felt was uncontested and accepted by all, particularly the
ruling government. However, when this was questioned and directly
attacked by government in the 1990s, as Raftopoulos has shown, white
farmers had to become "political" again to proclaim
their right of position. This is most clearly illustrated with their
initial support of the MDC. However, this invited such a harsh backlash
from government that farmers retreated yet again and sought solace
in being uninvolved in party politics. For Engin Fahri Isin:
becoming political should be seen neither as wide
as encompassing all way of being (conflating being political with
being social), nor as narrow as restricting it to being a citizen
(conflating polity and politics). The moment the dominated, stigmatized,
oppressed, marginalized, and disfranchised agents expose the arbitrary,
they realize themselves as groups and constitute themselves as political.
Claiming citizenship cannot be done without being
political, yet doing so created severe problems for the farming
community and their Union. In all white farmers have failed to find
a way to resolve the conflict between their claimed citizenship
and the belonging denied them by Mugabe and ZANU-PF. Instead, white
farmers have found themselves trapped in a position where they are
trying to claim the rights of citizenship and place in Zimbabwe,
whilst at the same trying to remain apolitical in a political crisis,
a major part of which has seen the ruling party mobilise significant
resources to bring about the obliteration of the white farming community.
Conclusion
Having given up on political involvement and having
shunned any official support for the MDC, the CFU turned against
dissenting voices within its own establishment in a bid to further
safeguard itself. The decision to shut down The Farmer and stifle
voices of dissent was a continuation of CFU policy towards dissenting
voices rather than a fundamental shift. As a result of the CFU's
handling of the land invasions, it lost the support of many farmers.
The CFU only concerned itself with those farmers still on the land,
because to pursue justice for those already evicted would mean confrontation
with the government. Its bias towards only those farmers still on
the land meant it alienated those farmers who had already been evicted.
With that number growing all the time, sympathy for them and fear
among the remaining farmers created anger against the CFU and its
policy of "quiet diplomacy" in dealing with government.
Yet the CFU remained committed to such a policy and distanced itself
from all political opposition to protect whatever relationship it
still believed it had with the government. As a result CFU has survived,
despite the destruction of the white/commercial farming community,
but this has caused a number of massive fissures in the community
that are unlikely to be easily resolved.
What this short paper has illustrated is that white
farmers, and in particular the CFU, have not fundamentally opposed
government at every turn during the last decade. Rather, they have
often tried to placate ZANU-PF, as they have felt this was the best
way to try and secure some future, regardless of how detrimental
that has been for relations between those farmers who have been
evicted and those who have remained on the land. White farmers and
their representatives have followed similar tactics at other times
in Zimbabwe's history, most notably during the violence of
Gukurahundi in the 1980s, a point that has been lost on most commentators
on the fortunes of white farmers in Zimbabwe since 2000.
*Rory Pilossof
is a Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Pretoria (January
2011)
Endnotes
i. This paper
is a condensed summary of some of the findings of my recently completed
PhD thesis, 'The Unbearable Whiteness of Being: White Farming Voices
in Zimbabwe and Their Narration of the Recent Past, c. 1970-2004'
(Ph.D. Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2010). The thesis is due
to be published as a book in 2011.
ii. For scholarly
simplifications of white farmers and white farming interests see
Colin Stoneman and Lionel Cliffe, Zimbabwe: Politics, Economics
and Society (London, 1989); Sam Moyo, The Land Question in Zimbabwe
(Harare, 1995); Sam Moyo, Land Reform Under Structural Adjustment
in Zimbabwe (Uppsala, 2000). For journalistic accounts that have
also presented simplified representations of white farmers see David
Caute, Under the Skin: The Death of White Rhodesia (Harmondsworth,
1983); Geoff Hill, Battle for Zimbabwe: The Final Countdown (Cape
Town, 2003); Martin Meredith, Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe
and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe (New York, 2003); Martin Meredith, Mugabe:
Power, Plunder and the Struggle for Zimbabwe (London, 2007); Andrew
Norman, Robert Mugabe and the Betrayal of Zimbabwe (Jefferson, 2004);
Andrew Meldrum, Where We Have Hope: A Memoir of Zimbabwe (New York,
2005); Christina Lamb, House of Stone: The True Story of a Family
Divided in War-torn Zimbabwe (London, 2006).
iii. Angus Selby,
'Commercial Farmers and the State: Interest Group Politics and Land
Reform in Zimbabwe', (D.Phil. Thesis, University of Oxford, 2006),
chapters 4 and 5.
iv. Brian Raftopolous,
'The Crisis in Zimbabwe', in Brian Raftopoulos and Alois Mlambo
(eds.), Becoming Zimbabwe (Harare, 2009), p. 210.
v. See The Justice
for Agriculture (JAG) Trust and the General Agricultural and Plantation
Workers Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ), Destruction of Zimbabwe's Backbone
Industry in Pursuit of Political Power: A Qualitative Report on
Events in Zimbabwe's Commercial Farming Sector Since the Year 2000
(Harare, 2008); General Agricultural and Plantation Workers Union
of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ), If Something is Wrong: The Invisible Suffering
of Farmworkers due to "Land Reform" (Harare, 2010).
vi. Brian Raftopoulos,
'Current Politics in Zimbabwe: Confronting the Crisis', in David
Harold-Barry (ed.), The Past is the Future. (Harare, 2004), p. 13.
vii. Jocelyn
Alexander, The Unsettled Land (Harare, 2006), p. 186.
viii. Nelson
Marongwe, 'Farm Occupations and Occupiers in the New Politics of
Land in Zimbabwe', in Amanda Hammar, Brian Raftopoulos and Stig
Jensen (eds.), Zimbabwe's Unfinished Business: Rethinking Land,
State and Nation in the Context of Crisis (Harare, 2003), p. 179-182.
ix. Joseph Chaumba,
Ian Scoones and William Wolmer, 'From Jambanja to Planning: The
Reassertion for Technocracy in Land Reform in South-eastern Zimbabwe',
Journal of Modern African Studies, 41, 4 (2003), p. 540.
x. From the
Daily News newspaper, 27 November, 2001, quoted in Chaumba, Scoones
and Wolmer, 'From Jambanja to Planning', p. 540.
xi. Jocelyn
Alexander and JoAnn McGregor, 'Elections, Land and the Politics
of Opposition in Matabeleland', Journal of Agrarian Change, 1, 4
(2001), p. 511 and footnote 2.
xii. Jocelyn
Alexander, '"Squatters", Veterans and the State in Zimbabwe',
in Brian Raftopoulos, Amanda Hammar and Stig Jensen (eds.), Zimbabwe's
Unfinished Business: Rethinking Land, State and Nation in the Context
of Crisis (Harare, 2003), p. 100. Marongwe also talks about war
veterans paying people to occupy land, but not where that money
came from. Marongwe 'Farm Occupations and Occupiers', p. 169.
xiii. Simon
de Swardt (dir.), House of Justice (Harare, 2009); Andrew Thompson
and Lucy Bailey (dirs.), Mugabe and the White African (Stoud, 2009).
xiv. Anon.,
'Chronology', in David Harold-Barry, (ed.), The Past is the Future
(Harare, 2004), p. 269.
xv. Selby, 'Commercial
Farmers and the State', p. 312.
xvi. Catherine
Buckle, African Tears: The Zimbabwe Land Invasions (Johannesburg,
2001); Catherine Buckle, Beyond Tears: Zimbabwe's Tragedy (Johannesburg,
2002), Lloyd Sachikonye, 'The Promised Land: From Expropriation
to Reconciliation and Jambanja', in Brian Raftopoulos and Tyrone
Savage (eds.), Zimbabwe: Injustice and Political Reconciliation
(Harare, 2005), pp. 1-18; Selby, 'Commercial Farmers and the State',
chapter 6.
xvii. All CFU
situation reports used to be online on the CFU's website. However,
that website has been terminated and the information no longer shared
publically. The CFU has a new website (www.cfuzim.org), but this
no longer carries the situation reports. Many of the situation reports
were reproduced on the online news service, zimbabwesituation.com.
xviii. Selby,
'Commercial Farmers and the State', p. 313.
xix. Amanda
Hammar and Brian Raftopoulos, 'Zimbabwe's Unfinished Business: Rethinking
Land, State and Nation', in Amanda Hammar, Brian Raftopoulos and
Stig Jensen (eds.), Zimbabwe's Unfinished Business: Rethinking Land,
State and Nation in the Context of Crisis (Harare, 2003), pp. 4-9.
xx. Deon Theron,
President of the CFU stated in the forward of the magazine, 'The
newspapers, internet, news bulletins etc are full of stories of
conflict, corruption, despair and death. Anything controversial
that will sell. This magazine should be for farmers, and concentrate
on farming issues. Sure - I see members discussing land reform and
compensation as it affects us all, but the focus - as a farming
magazine - should be on farming issues and the way forward'. Deon
Theron, 'Message From the President', AgriZim, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2010,
p. 3.
xxi. Ben Freeth,
'The New CFU Magazine ', in JAG Open Letter Forum, No. 724, 5 November
2010.
xxii. There
are numerous examples of this support for the government in The
Farmer magazine. For example see, Anon., 'Our Farmers Aid Farmers
in Times of Trial', The Farmer, 25 April, 1983, p. 5; Anon., 'Farmers
Must be Vigilant', The Farmer, 3 September, 1987, p. 7; Myfanwy
van Hoffen, 'Welcome End of a Ruthless Menace', The Farmer, November
26, 1987, p. 1.
xxiii. Selby,
'Commercial Farmers and the State', p. 177.
xxiv. Brian
Raftopoulos, 'The State in Crisis: Authoritarian Nationalism, Selective
Citizenship and Distortions of Democracy in Zimbabwe', in Amanda
Hammar, Brian Raftopoulos and Stig Jensen, (eds.), Zimbabwe's Unfinished
Business: Rethinking Land, State and Nation (Harare, 2003), pp.
226-36.
xxv. Engin Fahri
Isin, Being Political: Genealogies of Citizenship (Minneapolis,
2002), p. 276.
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