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Ziscosteel
investment spearheads Zimbabwe brain gain
Jason Moyo,
Mail and Guardian (SA)
January 24, 2011
http://mg.co.za/article/2011-01-24-ziscosteel-investment-spearheads-zimbabwe-brain-gain/
From where we
stood, peering hundreds of metres down into what was once Zimbabwe's
largest iron ore mine, I could see nothing more than an eerily silent
dust bowl.
"That's your problem," chided my childhood
friend, Craig Dube. "Very soon trucks will be running in and
out of there again."
For the first time in eight years, Dube has returned
from the United States, where he worked in a Boston factory as a
fitter and turner. But, unlike many other "exiles" on
holiday in Zimbabwe, he isn't going back.
The Buchwa iron mine, which feeds Ziscosteel, is
just outside our home town in the midlands. Once one of Africa's
largest iron producers, its main mill is little more than a pile
of rust-caked scrap, deserted by virtually all its skilled workers.
The remaining few have not been paid in a year.
Ziscosteel collapsed with debts of about $300-million.
Corruption and mismanagement have been blamed.
Dube, who trained here in the 1990s, has put in
an application to resume work at the mill. "I chose to come
back now, get myself set up before there's a rush of people coming
back," he said.
The
movement
The "rush" may be an exaggeration, but
for the first time in years, there is a perceptible movement by
skilled workers back to Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwean professionals began leaving in the 1990s,
but it became an exodus after 2000 when violence flared and the
economy tanked. By 2003 half-a-million workers had left, according
to Zimbabwe's Scientific and Industrial Research and Development
Centre.
By that year Zimbabwe had lost 80% of the doctors,
nurses, pharmacists and radiologists it had trained since 1980.
In 2008 alone, at the peak of the crisis, mines lost half their
skilled workforce, mostly to South Africa.
But Zimbabweans have begun taking real steps to
plug the drain. In December hundreds of émigrés from
countries including Ethiopia and Russia gathered at Victoria Falls
for the first major meeting of exiled Zimbabwean professionals.
Nokwazi Moyo, the chief organiser of the Development Foundation
for Zimbabwe, said his group believes "in a recovery strategy
that emphasises that the return of skills must have a clear agenda".
It won't be easy. In 2009 Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai was booed off a stage in London after he called on exiled
supporters to return, although growing numbers of groups are being
formed to help repatriate skilled Zimbabweans. Employment agencies
are setting up special units to attract exiles and real estate companies
attribute a spike in house prices to the growing demand from citizens
abroad.
In the country's largest companies there are signs
of returning skills. Mwana Africa, its largest nickel miner, and
Econet Wireless, its biggest telecoms operator, have reported that
a growing number of their own skilled workers who left years ago
are returning.
On the
register
New websites are flourishing, such as comehometozim.com
and motherlandzimbabwe.org, where emigrants are registering for
jobs back home. Zimbabwehumancapital.org, set up by the government
and the International Organisation for Migration, carries an extensive
listing of jobs by Ziscosteel, which is looking for everyone from
electricians to book-keepers. Dube has emailed the page to a former
Ziscosteel colleague working in Birmingham. "He'll be interested,"
he said.
Feeding the
optimism is Essar Africa's $400 million deal for a majority stake
in Ziscosteel, the most significant foreign investment under the
unity government.
Redcliff, the town that depended entirely on Ziscosteel,
has been deserted by banks and supermarkets, leaving dingy bars
where former workers numb themselves with cheap spirits. Pattison
Mubaiwa, who headed the workers' committee, hopes to see a quick
change. "Families here are suffering," he said.
At the local council offices the mayor, Joseph Matewa,
said his workers have not been paid since September 2009, but the
Essar deal has raised hopes.
At a farm 20km outside the town, Farai Makwati,
an old school friend who left Zimbabwe in 2002, greets us at the
gate, three beers in hand. He returned just over a year ago, leaving
behind his London tax consultancy job for this leased patch of land.
"I grow this beer," he said enthusiastically.
Makwati has signed a contract with the country's largest brewery
and has grown his first crop of barley. In September he will plant
his first tobacco crop.
He has obviously taken note of the numbers. Tobacco
growers made close to $500-million last year, double their 2009
earnings, and higher profits are expected this year.
In the radio commentary box above the deserted Torwood
Stadium, which overlooks the steel factory, I moan about the demise
of our local football team, which used to play in the premiership
league until the factory began collapsing.
Makwati counters my sentiment with the story of
a businessman who lost €430 000 in cash during a recent robbery
at his home. "So, you see, there is money here," said
Dube.
Laughing, he
whips out his cellphone and updates his Facebook status: "You
can come back now. Open for business."
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