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Labour's Past, Present and Future - 'Progress' in Zimbabwe Conference
Amanda Atwood, Kubatana.net
November 08, 2010

'Progress' in Zimbabwe Conference index page

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Speaker: Brian Raftopoulos
Discussants: Hamadziripi Tamukamoyo, Kumbirai Kundenga, Tapiwa Chagonda

Brian Raftopoulos opened the discussion by looking at the ways in which the state has constructed the labour question from 1980-2010. He noted that Bulawayo was the cradle of trade unionism, and that the formation of the labour unions came out of the past relationship of labour with ZAPU.

During the 1980s, Raftopoulos noted, there were different messages coming out of the state, including Zanu PF's combined strategy of substituting its own labour centre for a more established trade union tradition, culminating in the creation of the ZCTU. Secondly, the ruling party's attack on legacies of the Rhodesian industrial relations system, and also attacks on ZAPU within the labour department. But at the same time, there are emerging calls for a greater productivity of labour, and a normalisation of industrial relations, trying to get to a context in which wage bargaining and collective bargaining can begin to establish. Listen

The 1990s, Raftopoulos said, were a liberalisation period in which a normalised industrial relations system was established. Then in the post-2000 period, there was a breakdown of institutionalised forms of labour and governmentality, and a strong repressive position taken by the state towards the labour movement. The post Global Political Agreement phase, Raftopolous said, has looked at the difficulties of trying to normalise labour relations again.

Raftopoulos also discussed the ways trade unionists have tried to use an industrial relations discourse in order to avoid political intervention. In other words, they try to use a moderinist industrial relations framework in order to stop the state from intervening politically in trade union affairs. According to Raftopoulos, it is also clear that trade unions in Zimbabwe, as elsewhere, are very much children of the Enlightenment - they are very much those who have pushed for universal rights, and have often fought national repression through a recourse to a call for universal rights. This makes some believe that it has been incorporated into an imperialist framework, but Raftopoulos wants to challenge that. Listen

In the 2000s, Raftopolous discussed, trade unions in Zimbabwe intensify their international lobbying, resulting in the ILO report of 2009. This report is very clear about what the state has done. It says it saw a clear pattern of arrests, detention, violence and torture of trade union leaders and members by the security sector forces coinciding with ZCTU nation-wide events, indicating some centralised direction to the security forces to take such action, and a clear pattern of control over ZCTU trade union gatherings through the application of POSA. It noted the systematic targeting of ZCTU officials and members, particularly in rural areas, involving significant violence and anti-union discrimination in employment, in what appeared to be a calculated attempt to intimidate and threaten ZCTU members.

So, Raftopoulos noted, the lobbying and discourse of labour became very much about judging the repressive state measures against labour against universal standards, and using that to critique the internal state. This was interpreted by some - such as Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros - as labour becoming ensconced in a kind of cosmopolitan Western discourse. Raftopoulos found this wrong on two scores. Firstly, it misses the long historical precedent of this kind of discursive framework within labour - it's not a new thing. Secondly, it assumes that because there is some agreement between international positions and the position of the labour movement in Zimbabwe, that the latter is complicit with imperialism. This is to assume that that whole project can be defined by how it is understood from outside, without looking at the local dynamics which are generating and producing those particular discourses. Listen

During the discussion, Hamadziripi Tamukamoyo asked what the potential was for agricultural labour to provide a force for change in Zimbabwe's future. If there was deindustrialisation, he noted, and the opening of agricultural production, how would this impact on the labour movement, where trade unions traditionally have been urban based. Also, he asked if there was any potential for an organised informal sector labour union. He also warned against glorifying the contribution of disapora-based Zimbabweans. Those remittances, he argued, support the comprador class. That money isn't going to the dispossessed, it's supporting a consumer economy.

Kumbirai Kudenga, a trade unionist since 1972, stated that the ZCTU created the MDC as a worker's party, but that their mistake came in the first MDC congress, wherein they allowed a mixed bag - business people, intellectuals, lawyers, employers, farmers, and others into the leadership positions of the MDC. These different players then compromised the progress towards the workers' agenda by the MDC.

Commenting from the floor, John Saul noted that the issues raised by Raftopolous are being played out all over the world. One of Zanu PF's strongest cards is that of black nationalism. There is strong support among the black middle class elsewhere for this rhetoric. Saul mentioned that Bill Fletcher, a leading black American trade unionist, has written a number of articles on exactly this question. His piece Some of my friends are being tortured in Zimbabwe, is his attempt to bring more critique from blacks outside the country to the regime in Zimbabwe.

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