|
Back to Index
Poor
whites struggle by in Zimbabwe
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Joseph
Nhlahla (AR No. 150, 13-Feb-08)
February 13, 2008
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=342638&apc_state=henh
An elderly white man
sits behind the steering wheel of an old van with "National
Railways Zimbabwe" emblazoned on its doors. As he and the
group of black men with him disembark from the van, people start
pointing and passing comments about him.
Slightly unkempt, with
a rough beard and a stooping back, the old man trudges to the Bulawayo
offices of National Railways Zimbabwe, NRZ - once the envy of other
rail companies in sub-Saharan Africa but now a run-down shadow of
itself after years of mismanagement.
Someone in the crowd
of onlookers at Bulawayo station asks why the old man is still around
when so many whites have fled the country to settle elsewhere, after
the ruling ZANU-PF threw them off their farms in President Robert
Mugabe's land-grab policy.
Another man says he is
surprised the railway man is actually an employee rather than employing
others as has generally been the case in this former British colony.
The responses come fast
and furious, "He is from that group of poor whites who have
nowhere to go"; "He has no choice but work for the NRZ
or he would be out on the streets as a vagrant"; "He
never owned a farm because if he did, he would have left the country
after it had been taken over by the war veterans."
Everyone has an explanation
for the apparent oddity of a white man holding down a "proper"
job alongside blacks. The increasingly common sight of white men
working on the railway is taking locals some time to get used to.
The plight of white people
has changed ever since Zimbabwe's current political and economic
crisis set in. Some say it began with the seizure of white commercial
farmland in 2000.
For many whites, the
going has never been this tough since they settled here decades
ago.
Although the minority
white group continued to enjoy some of its class and race privileges
into the post-independence period, members have also borne the brunt
of President Mugabe's anger. He has frequently accused them
of stealing African land in the past, and also of working with his
political foes to depose him.
In 2003, former government
junior minister Jonathan Moyo, who has since fallen out with Mugabe,
said whites should leave the country because they were behind the
creation of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, MDC.
These accusations stemmed
from reports that the MDC was being funded by white commercial farmers,
with state television showing footage of MDC president Morgan Tsvangirai
allegedly receiving a cheque donation from white farmers.
The white population
has plummeted over the last two-and-a-half decades. Following independence
from Britain in 1980, some figures put the white population at over
a quarter of a million. However, by 2004, various estimates -
including the last census - put the figure at under 30,000.
A Bulawayo-based historian
and researcher told IWPR that much has changed over the years for
whites in Zimbabwe. Those remaining in the country are often there
because they have little alternative.
"While whites have
always been a minority, their mass exodus after 2000 has meant those
who remained may have been less wealthy, with no relations outside
Zimbabwe, and unable to relocate," he said.
As Zimbabwe prepares
to go to the polls, the bulk of the white minority is likely to
vote for the MDC, as has happened in previous elections.
Yet there are still whites
who support ZANU-PF, taking part in national galas organised by
the ruling party where songs extolling the virtues of the regime
fill the air.
Despite Mugabe's
vitriol towards whites, senior government officials have maintained
strong relationships with white business people. Mugabe has also
appointed whites to prominent public posts, notably Timothy Stamps,
a former health minister who now acts in an advisory capacity in
the ministry, and Stuart Hargreaves, the director of veterinary
services.
An American professor
of journalism working in Bulawayo says whites still enjoy some privileges.
"We still do get
preferential treatment," she said. "We see it in queues
where whites who decide to jump the queue are not taken to task;
in shops where shop assistants are very ingratiating."
Hayes Mabweazara, a Zimbabwean
academic based in Scotland, said the year 2000 saw whites becoming
victims of "reverse racism" which forced many to retreat
from public life.
"The post-2000
political upheavals following the farm invasions ignited an unprecedented
form of 'reverse racism' that naturally forced whites
to withdraw from public visibility purely for security reasons.
A great many of these lost their relatives and friends in the farm
invasions," he told IWPR.
"Those who have
stayed on remain hopeful that one day sanity will prevail and they
will find their feet again. It is a particularly sad story for many
who have known no life outside Zimbabwe."
A white missionary priest
who adopted Zimbabwean nationality in the Eighties says white citizens
still have a place here, despite efforts by the regime to marginalise
them.
"While a few remain,
whites still have a place and a role to play in the creation of
a better Zimbabwe," said the priest.
"Unfortunately,
their involvement in national discourse or politics has been met
with hostility by the regime. It is possible that those who were
forced to leave the country will come back, but others will obviously
decide to move on with their lives in their adopted countries."
*Joseph Nhlahla
is the pseudonym of a journalist in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|