Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe: The Ground of Politics

Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe: The Ground of Politics

by Blair Rutherford
Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe: The Ground of Politics

Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe: The Ground of Politics

by Blair Rutherford

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Overview

In the early twenty-first century, white-owned farms in Zimbabwe were subject to large-scale occupations by black urban dwellers in an increasingly violent struggle between national electoral politics, land reform, and contestations over democracy. Were the black occupiers being freed from racist bondage as cheap laborers by the state-supported massive land redistribution, or were they victims of state violence who had been denied access to their homes, social services, and jobs? Blair Rutherford examines the unequal social and power relations shaping the lives, livelihoods, and struggles of some of the farm workers during this momentous period in Zimbabwean history. His analysis is anchored in the time he spent on a horticultural farm just east of Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe, that was embroiled in the tumult of political violence associated with jambanja, the democratization movement. Rutherford complicates this analysis by showing that there was far more in play than political oppression by a corrupt and authoritarian regime and a movement to rectify racial and colonial land imbalances, as dominant narratives would have it. Instead, he reveals, farm worker livelihoods, access to land, gendered violence, and conflicting promises of rights and sovereignty played a more important role in the political economy of citizenship and labor than had been imagined.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253024077
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 12/19/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 294
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Blair Rutherford is professor of Anthropology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology (cross-appointed to the Institute of African Studies, the Institute of Political Economy, and Department of Geography and Environmental Studies) at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.

Read an Excerpt

Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe

The Ground of Politics


By Blair Rutherford

Indiana University Press

Copyright © 2017 Blair Rutherford
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-253-02407-7



CHAPTER 1

OPPRESSION, MARAITI, AND FARM WORKER LIVELIHOODS: SHIFTING GROUNDS IN THE 1990S


October 20,1999 Harare Office of ZimfarmEast

I met with Mr. Chapunga at his company's headquarters on the edge of the manufacturing district in south-central Harare. It was not until near the end of this interview that he came closest to the topic he had told me he would not broach — the ongoing labor dispute on Upfumi farm, which was the very topic I had arranged to meet Mr. Chapunga about in his capacity as acting group human resources manager of ZimfarmEast. The farm's pack-shed and agricultural operations were owned and run by ZimfarmEast, which was then the agro-based division of Zimfarm Limited, the highly profitable Zimbabwean agro-industrial company.

Looking at me directly, his tone serious, he said, "There are two English sayings that are pertinent here: 'blood is thicker than water,' and 'home is best.'" Keeping his eyes on me, he said no more. After a few awkward seconds, I asked for clarification. Somewhat contemptuously, he said that I should recognize what he was saying. "Even if you move and your dad dies," he said, "you still remain identified with your home. If someone as white as you are says, 'Stay on, you will win,' it is Dutch confidence." I asked for further clarification, and he explained that the phrase "Dutch confidence" refers to the tendency of "the Dutch to drink before they go to a war they can't win to give them courage. You should conclude what this means," he said abruptly, folding up papers on his desk, signaling the interview's end, "on your own."

"As for the second saying?" I pushed further, as I hastened to gather up my notebook and bag.

"That simply means," he commented firmly but more quietly as he escorted me to the door, "people will say that some people belong to this area and some don't. Remember the old days when we fought against whites."

As I left the ZimfarmEast office and emerged into the humid, busy streets of midday Harare, I knew I had just been told to butt out of this labor dispute. I understood that my occasional visits to the fired Upfumi farm workers who were staying at the musososo — the not-so-temporary camp next to the short gravel road leading to Upfumi farm on the Harare-Mutare highway — during the previous two months, were being watched and assessed by the company's point man in this dispute. And moreover, I knew that racial identification and belonging were factors in how Mr. Chapunga saw me. Yet I did not fully understand his somewhat cryptic remarks, the illocutionary force of his discussion of the "two English sayings." By noting the "Englishness" of these phrases, he clearly wanted to suggest a familiarity with what he perceived as my "world," indexed by my racialized coding as "white" and my first language of English more than by my Canadian citizenship. Nonetheless, since the main managers of Zimfarm and of Upfumi farm itselfwere, at that time, white Zimbabweans, it was unclear how he saw his own positioning as a black Zimbabwean working under this order, given his invocation of race and belonging as a bedrock of identity. Subsequently, the fired farm workers staying at the musososo and I discussed this interview several times, conjecturing different possible meanings. Although we never settled on a single explanation of its semantics, we agreed that the aim of Mr. Chapunga's "English sayings" was to warn and unsettle me.


* * *

The ambivalence and lingering unease of this interview was an incidental example of the marked uncertainty of discursive intent and audiences, mingled through assertions and sentiments of defining who belongs and who does not. This lengthy labor dispute was intertwined with a diverse range of social forces, including electoral politics, gendered regimes of labor, legal domains, preternatural realms, and icons of potential power from Harare to Marondera, Europe to Canada. These are just some of the divergent threads that entangled these farm workers. It was an unease that became increasingly visceral and volatile for these mainly women farm workers, located as they were in precarious livelihood activities, as this twenty month labor dispute drew to a close in June 2000. The labor battle was energized by the momentous, charged, and highly ambivalent political and economic struggles vigorously agitating on the national scale in the late 1990s, with audiences and networks ranging from very local to international, and with a number of economic, social and bodily repercussions. The ongoing uncertainty of the labor dispute often meant that the farm workers involved in it were not always certain of the ongoing status of their case, let alone what the presence or changing intensity of one of these social forces meant for them.

The manager's reference to "war" was commonly deployed by the farm workers engaged in the dispute and by many of those who offered support as well. Many even referred to the camp where some of them stayed outside of Upfumi, the musososo, as "DRC," (Democratic Republic of Congo, the central African country that was in the midst of war at that time and to which Zimbabwean troops were controversially sent in August 1998 to help prop up its new government).

"War" was also an appropriate metaphor as these farm workers drew on a repertoire of songs and other signifying practices associated with the liberation struggle of the 1970s. This struggle had acquired importance on the national scale as ZANU (PF) had sought to legitimize its rule and power since winning the 1980 national election, and every subsequent one until 2008 by, in part, privileging the "patriotic memories" and citizenship claims of those who were part of the guerrilla armies during the 1970s war over those of other Zimbabweans (Werbner 1998; Kriger 2006; Ranger 2004). These Upfumi farm workers were apt to view their labor struggle as having momentous consequences for others. They were buoyed by generally supportive, although infrequent, national media coverage, the occasional interest of international groups and individuals, and by recognizing their own endurance for taking part in such a lengthy labor struggle, extraordinary in its duration in the history of agricultural labor relations in Zimbabwe.

As I spent time with them in the last half of 1999, these workers increasingly saw their struggle, their war, as having import on the national scale. They viewed it as part and parcel of the wider mobilization occurring in the name of workers and change signaled by the widespread strikes and stay-aways, occasional urban riots as well as the contentious processes of constitutional change playing out in the late 1990s up to February 2000 (Raftopoulos and Sachikonye 2001; Raftopoulos and Mlambo 2009). The focal point of this mobilization was the emergence of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which many initially saw as a "workers' party" (e.g., Alexander 2000a). Formally launched in September 1999, this new political party was strongly associated with the main national trade union congress, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), through its organizational role in the party's formation and because its secretary general since 1988, Morgan Tsvangirai, became the MDC's leader. The ruling ZANU (PF) party itself was not untouched by these debates for democratization and change in 1999, in part as younger members were calling for a greater role in the decision-making of the ruling party and questioning the wisdom of their aging leaders.

During speeches at rallies and in conversations they had with each other and with me, those in this labor struggle frequently drew on narrative forms and signs that are found in the dominant Zimbabwean nationalist repertoire such as those coming from Marxist and Christian traditions (e.g., Brand 1977; Sylvester 1991; Ranger 1995; Scarnecchia 2008). Such tropes were clearly drawn upon in a speech made by Councillor Banda, the then ZANU (PF) councillor to the Goromonzi Rural District Council for the ward in which Upfumi was located. He gave it during an August 1999 rally held at the musososo and attended by more than one hundred people; participants who by their sheer numbers helped to signal the sense of national import assumed by many. Although the majority at the rally were predominantly the women farm workers involved in the labor dispute, there were also the male executives of the workers' committees of neighboring farms, and Harare male representatives of International Socialist Organization (ISO) of Zimbabwe, who were mobilizing for the launch of the MDC, and of the Zimbabwe Federation of Trade Unions (ZFTU) , a rival trade union federation to the ZCTU supported and promoted by ZANU (PF). Facing this politically diverse audience, the ZANU (PF) councillor declared:

I think the time has arrived for you workers of Upfumi to be the light of the workers on the farms in Zimbabwe. Your story is being broadcast in the newspapers, so your story is being understood everywhere. You are like Christians who were told in the Bible that you are the light of the world, so you must light the whole country. ... Comrades, the time has come so that you can liberate your fellow workers, and you too, must liberate yourselves when you are liberating others. You are hearing people saying that you are so oppressed, you are not supposed to be here [at this type of meeting], yet by being here shows that you know your rights [maraiti] and where you are going!


The discursive background, the unsaid, with which Councillor Banda engaged in dialogue, was the assumption that farm workers do not agitate for their rights, do not attend union meetings, and thus are passive and simply subject to the will of their (white) employers. It was one of the assumptions examined in my earlier work on farm workers in Zimbabwe (e.g., Rutherford 2001a, 2001b) and also by the other limited work focusing on farm workers in the 1980s and 1990s (e.g., Loewenson 1988; Mugwati and Balleis 1994). It was also a key entailment of the representation of farm workers as a "community" in national-scale discourses.

How did these maraiti come to mean so much to the farm workers? Why did they imagine their struggle to have national import? How was this struggle predicated on, yet worked against, the conditional mode of belonging that situated the vast majority of commercial farm workers since the colonial period? Why were representatives of both organizations that were soon to be visibly against each other in a very violent political contestation (as ZANU [PF] sought to crush the MDC starting in early 2000), and with varying levels of involvement during the Upfumi struggle, present at this rally? How did gender inform the dynamics of this struggle, given that the leaders in this struggle — including most of those on the Upfumi workers' committee who were leading the workers in this war, the management team of Upfumi and Zimfarm, the lawyers, politicians, as well as interveners like myself — were men, yet the vast majority of the Upfumi farm workers were women? In what ways did this struggle resemble the heroic plotline portrayed by the councillor and the media of the oppressed being conscientized into action in the name of their rights; a plot that resonates in many social science narratives as well as political discourse elsewhere? And how did I understand and contribute, in very modest ways, to this struggle, so that Mr. Chapunga felt obliged to obliquely, but firmly, declare that I need to disengage as I did not belong to the farm, let alone to Zimbabwe?

This chapter outlines the dominant mode of belonging that existed on Upfumi farm until the mid-1990s, when its particular dependencies began to face challenges through social projects of localized leadership. This leadership drew on translocal resources and networks that were caught up in the exciting ferment of change on the national scale, particularly through the idiom of rights. Since this was a struggle that drew on performative styles and narratives that resonated widely, but also had to assist in the social mobilization of the workers, audiences were key. Examining how this labor dispute found traction among different constituencies and how it became entangled in multiple and competing scale-making projects with varied effects is, however, the aim of the following chapters. In this chapter, I lay out the particular gendered power/sovereignty dynamic of the dominant mode of belonging and its performative practices from which this labor struggle emerged and that it squarely challenged, thus contributing to a fraying of the authority relations that had already begun.


"You Are No Better than Dogs": Domestic Government in Independent Zimbabwe

All workers who had been working on the farm before Zimfarm purchased it in February 1997 described the mode of belonging, similar to "domestic government" as discussed in the introduction: a territorialized project pivoting on racialized and gendered rule and performative styles implemented through bodily disciplining techniques of surveillance, work rhythms, rewards, and, on occasion, corporal punishment. Racialized and gendered codes of respect for the farmer and his management hierarchy were the most relevant bodily styles workers needed to learn as a way to minimize problems for themselves and acquire whatever resources were permissible for them to acquire (e.g., wages, rations, fields to grow food, credit).

Until 2000, commercial farms were, for the most part, an effective and largely profitable form of territorialized power for the owner(s) — a means of seeking to act on the actions of others by delimiting and asserting control over a geographical area. Given the racialized colonial history of these farms, many analysts concentrate on particular attributes associated with the resulting identification of the owners and workers. This focus is typically the whiteness of the farmers, which putatively marks either the modernity and capitalist orientation of the enterprise or as a sign of colonial brutality and privilege over the blackness and relative poverty of the workers (see Rutherford 2001a; Selby 2006; Hughes 2010; Pilossof 2012). But there tends to be less attention paid to how commercial farms have operated as a form of governance, how control over land has also meant particular forms of control over people who have worked and often have lived on it, and how labor relations cannot be separated from a range of dependencies and identifications that shape life during and outside working hours; that is, how landed property here as elsewhere entailed forms of power over people that have been closely imbricated in the state formation of the colony and the nation-state.

In regards to landed property in British-controlled Egypt, Timothy Mitchell (2002) has observed that European legal theory commonly has contrasted the right of property with sovereignty, or rule over people. Yet, in practice, state arrangements in Europe and European colonies have frequently made landed property a "realm of exception, within which power operated without rights" as the "architecture that formed the enclosed agricultural colony, a microcolonialism within a larger colonial domain, went hand in hand with a legal architecture that constructed territories of arbitrary power within the larger space of legal reason and abstraction" (Mitchell 2002, 70-71).

Commercial farms in colonial and postcolonial Zimbabwe formed a microcolonialism that entailed a range of power relations particular to its territorialized domain — as well as those that cut across it — defining comportment, rule, and claims. In other words, it entailed a particular "mode of belonging" where forms and modalities of recognition other than rights operated on the farm, although white farmers and their associations had previously cited property rights in their typically efficacious claims for assistance and other forms of recognition by institutions and organizations at national and international scales of action. It was a mode of belonging deeply resonant with racialized practices and sentiments.

White farmers had long used their status as the archetypical "settler citizens" (Mamdani 1996, 2001) in the (Southern) Rhodesian nation to acquire a range of governmental support for their production and marketing, including ensuring a cheap and relatively pliable workforce (Clarke 1977; Rubert 1998; Rutherford 2004). Their rights relied on the absence of workers' rights. Colonial legislation such as the Masters and Servants Act provided the legal architecture, while the routinized social projects imbricated in state practices of racial rule aimed at establishing an economically productive and civilized colony for white settlers helped to lay out the contours of social and power arrangements of what Rhodesian nomenclature defined as "European farms." In these social territories, many of those recognized as European farmers became adroit at forming organizations to demand and build on their racialized rights at varied scales of action — from localized to national to international — including ensuring a cheap labor force with no rights recognized by governmental authorities (e.g., Clarke 1977; Phimister 1988; Rubert 1998; Selby 2006). The success of these practices, however, was not guaranteed.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Farm Labor Struggles in Zimbabwe by Blair Rutherford. Copyright © 2017 Blair Rutherford. Excerpted by permission of Indiana University Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction
1. "Oppression," Maraiti and Farm Worker Livelihoods: Shifting Grounds in the 1990s
2. The Traction of Rights, the Art of Politics: The Labor "War" at Upfumi
3. The Drama of Politics: Dissension, Suffering, and Violence
4. Politics and Precarious Livelihoods during the Time of Jambanja
Conclusion: Representing Labor Struggles
Appendix: Correspondence with the President's Office
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

"Makes a distinctive contribution to an emerging literature on labor in Africa, specificially in relation to farm workers . . . The reader is drawn into both their courageous struggles and their suffering, without the writing ever descending into pathos or melodrama. Blair Rutherford's in-depth knowledge of the wider literature on Zimbabwe further illuminates these events."

Peter Gibbon

An explicit and well-argued critique of the polarized debate on contemporary Zimbabwe by providing an alternative understanding of the conflict in terms of electoral politics, pursuit of material livelihoods, and forms of belonging.

Pnina Werbner]]>

Makes a distinctive contribution to an emerging literature on labor in Africa, specificially in relation to farm workers . . . The reader is drawn into both their courageous struggles and their suffering, without the writing ever descending into pathos or melodrama. Blair Rutherford's in-depth knowledge of the wider literature on Zimbabwe further illuminates these events.

Peter Gibbon]]>

An explicit and well-argued critique of the polarized debate on contemporary Zimbabwe by providing an alternative understanding of the conflict in terms of electoral politics, pursuit of material livelihoods, and forms of belonging.

Pnina Werbner

Makes a distinctive contribution to an emerging literature on labor in Africa, specificially in relation to farm workers . . . The reader is drawn into both their courageous struggles and their suffering, without the writing ever descending into pathos or melodrama. Blair Rutherford's in-depth knowledge of the wider literature on Zimbabwe further illuminates these events.

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