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NSSA owes former farm workers and farmers millions
Munyaradzi
Bwanya
August 15, 2009
The National
Social Security Authority (NSSA) is the body charged with the responsibility
of securing the post employment socio economic entitlements of all
persons who contribute to it throughout the duration of their employment.
It is a compulsory form of tax, much like the AIDS levy. Neither
the individual nor the employer-s consent is required for
payment. In practice the employer pays directly to the authority
after abased on how many people the farm employed and their respective
earnings. In short, the government tells the employer what to pay.
Most farms, before the
fast Track exercise were registered businesses obliged to pay the
tax. On average, the overwhelming majority of farms paid their dues.
The NSSA official was in fact the equivalent of the biblical Zacheo
a feared tax collector dreaded by most farm owners. It is whispered
that a good number of the individuals became very rich. The point
is that as law abiding citizens, the farm businesses paid NSSA contributions
in respect of the farmers and the farm workers.
With the advent of the
chaotic land reform process, the overwhelming majority of farm workers
lost their social security, they lost their shelter, especially
those seen to be sympathetic to their former bosses. They now constitute
the most significant group of the vulnerable Internally Displaced
Persons. More to the point is that they lost their right to stay
at the farms which previously had been guaranteed by their employment.
When employment was terminated, the right to remain on the farms
was also terminated. Realising this, the government obliged through
statutory instrument the farm owners to pay "packages"
to their former employees. The correct thing to do would have been
to oblige the new farm owners to inherit both the benefits and obligations
of the farms. This was the final show of the termination of both
their right to remain and to work. The farm workers had lost their
livelihood.
The new farmers were
generally not known to the farm workers who dared to stay unless
it was an army general, a judge, a politician or other prominent
person. Most new farm owners were either unwilling or unable to
maintain the same size workforce or to give the same the same service
rewards. More than 30 000 farm workers with extended families of
up to 200 000 members lost their livelihoods. A good fraction of
them was also not eligible to benefit from the land reform because
the prohibition of dual citizenship made them stateless persons
and therefore not Zimbabweans. Those that took over the farms did
not and still do not run them as registered businesses and do not
pay tax. The Zacheo of the old days is generally powerless to compel
the prominent beneficiaries of land reform to pay their dues. To
date very few farms remain on the NSSA contributions list. Despite
it being a compulsory tax, most current farm workers have no contributions
to NSSA for the good number of the years since the land reform.
In conclusion,
NSSA owes former farm workers and farmers their money. They contributed
like all other beneficiaries and they have lost their livelihoods
and social security. This is the problem that the scheme was meant
to address. It is incumbent upon all Human rights friendly lawyers
and civic society organizations that assist with free legal services
to assist this mostly indigent group of Zimbabweans to access their
money. It should not be difficult to prove that a particular individual
worked on a particular farm while the farm was contributing to NSSA.
The rule by our courts that they will not allow a floodgate of litigation
to open is certainly not meant to deprive citizens of their rights
but only to ensure that its processes are not abused. They will
not be able to even get media coverage of their cause for lack of
funding. The MPs of the affected constituencies ought at the very
least consult and debate the issue.
*The author
is a final year law student at the University
of Zimbabwe
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