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The
land issue: from enslavement to environmentalism
Review by RS Roberts,
The Zimbabwe Independent
February 22, 2008
DM Hughes, From Enslavement
to Environmentalism: Politics on a Southern African Frontier (Harare,
Weaver Press, 2006), xvii, 285pp.
This book, co-published
in the USA, again puts Zimbabwe's reading public in Weaver's
debt. For it touches on many important problems facing this country,
particularly land, and should be read by all.
It's actual subject
is a narrow stretch of land in the southern part of the Chimanimani-Sitatonga
mountain ranges on both sides of the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border.
The focus is on the Vhimba area, Chief Ngorima's Communal
Land, and Chief Gogoi's lands in Mossurize. Two areas but
one people, speaking Ndau and with the same experience of Gaza rule
in the nineteenth century; but divided not just by an international
frontier but also by a very different trajectory of colonial history
and development.
On the Mozambique side
the Portuguese in effect perpetuated the basic pre-colonial socioeconomic
structure based on the accumulation of and circulation of subordinate
people. Chiefly patronage and clientage continued, but made to serve
Portuguese needs in the form of corvees and forced labor for the
more developed areas to its north. And Renamo's need for manpower
in effect continued such a system from 1979 to 1992.
This is what the "Enslavement"
in the book's title means - pre-colonial slavery that
was ambulatory or circulatory but not chattel. The point of the
author's argument here is that people and not land was the
issue, and the consequence of this was that boundaries and mapping
received little attention under the Portuguese. On the Zimbabwean
side of the frontier, however, things were very different.
In the 1890s the Moodie
Trekkers simply seized, and thereafter the British South Africa
Company appropriated and alienated, land that seemed best or most
convenient for commercial agriculture. Africans were pushed or hemmed
into reserves like Ngorima, often and far-sightedly set aside by
Native Commissioners before it was official policy. And so in Zimbabwe
mapping and definition of boundaries became crucial to all concerned;
and chiefs and headmen became not so much governors of people as
allocators of land. Hence people, particularly the marginal, the
latecomers and refugees from Mozambique in the 1980s, became cannon-fodder
for turf wars; they would be allocated disputed land, like an infantry,
"to go over the top" of disputed boundaries rather than
of defensive trenches. Politics in Rhodesia became cadastral.
This was particularly
so in the area under study because its almost unique environmental
features had the potential for new and varied uses which could only
increase the pressure on land. In the 1950s had come the development
of modern commercial forestry - the exotic trees needing the
high rainfall of the region. This pushed former labor tenants from
farms into the reserves, as did the growing European interest in
conservation. In 1965 the Chimanimani National Park was enlarged
and eight years later the Rusitu and Haroni Botanical Reserves were
created, all at the expense of Ngorima's traditional lands.
This is where the "Environmentalism"
of the book's title comes in. For after Independence in Zimbabwe
in 1980 and peace in Mozambique in 1992 the special features of
the region attracted renewed and even more varied interest -
from capitalist companies and individuals, from charitable agencies
(both mainly of whites) and government planners and local councils
(eager for development, almost at any price).
The capitalists
ranged from insensitive and grasping South African logging companies
in Mozambique to sensitive individuals on the Zimbabwean side trying
to combine conservation with profit by catering for "eco-tourists".
The charitable agencies are mainly external donors and NGOs concerned
with "sustainable development" and protection of the
environment. Under their aegis, aided by government officials and
institutions hand in hand with capitalists from the tourist industry
and academics as consultants, Campfire
(Communal Areas Management Programme for Indigenous Resources) soon
put the communal lands under attack again. But now insidious infiltration,
however laudable the intentions, into the core of black farmlands
rather than the tinkering with external borders as under the former
white government. And the effect in Mozambique was similar, anticipating
the peasants' getting real entitlement to their lands.
This and many other provocative
proportions enliven this intriguing work, which should be read with
Moore's book on the Tangwena resettlement area (reviewed earlier,
Zimbabwe Independent February 9 - 15, 2007). Much better written
that Moore's (a student can teach a lecturer how to suck eggs!)
Hughes' book challenges us to look at land, particularly communal
land in Zimbabwe, in a new light, to cast old prejudices aside.
Many neo-liberal commentators have long argued that the solution
is to give title in the communal lands; but we all know the fate
of such reforms by Stolypin in the pre-Revolutionary Russia and
the fate of the peasantry thereafter. Thus the implication of this
book is that amidst the ever-changing and multitudinous uncertainties
of Africa - climatic, demographic and political - inviolable
reserves are still the best security for the people, at least until
an efficient land market is allowed to (re)develop in the former
commercial farming areas.
The old Rhodesian Native
Department, then, did a good job, one must conclude, until it was
invaded in the 1940s by dirigiste economists and scientists -
the forebears of today's government planners who, as Moore
showed, threatened Tangwena's people with eviction in the
1990s. Their more academic successors behind today's environmentalism
may not be as dirigiste as either; but they usually get their way
by "workshopping it" and by going through government
agencies. Hughes himself might not go that far but, although part
of the system, he does sound a warning bell.
Missionary imperialism
took land and left Africans with the Bible; academic environmentalism
will, if we are not careful, take the land and leave the people
with an eco-tourist brochure. In the communal lands from Nyanga
to Chimanimani, and in the "Safari" areas in the drier
north, west and south, new forms of colonialism now stalk the land
- but that not as bad, I suppose, as the anarchy in the former
commercial farming areas.
*Prof Roberts
is a former head of the History department at UZ
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