Zimbabwe: GAPWUZ Statement
The General Agriculture and Plantation Workers' Union of Zimbabwe (GAPWUZ) urgently calls for a stop to the continued farm disturbances, which have resulted in a serious farm labour crisis that is threatening to completely destroy the agriculture sector.
21 January 2010
GAPWUZ neither condones nor encourages
the current attempts to deliberately take over farms by way of
murdering, attacking and intimidating workers and their employers. What
further incenses us is the silence of government officials whom we feel
should be there to put a stop to such heinous acts which have left
thousands of farm workers homeless and in dire need of food, education,
water and sanitation.
As farm workers struggle ahead to
reposition themselves in the new political dispensation, they should be
reminded that they are not fighting alone in the trenches. All the
human rights defenders in Zimbabwe, including GAPWUZ salute the
unwavering courage and charisma of many farm workers who were
brutalized, maimed, tortured, kidnapped and raped in the recent farm
invasions.
Such was a negative and sad development
in the progress of human kind from light into darkness. However, in the
same vein the inclusive government seems to pacify such a historical
blind spot as a moment of madness. In such a context, the farm workers'
cause remains unanswered or negated as massive human rights abuses and
the torture of farm workers on the few remaining operational farms
remain the norm rather than the exception. Their echoes
and sentiments are slowly but gradually sinking into oblivion even in
the new inclusive government. Farm workers, you are the masters for
food production.
A Zimbabwean farm worker is always
saturated with misery. One can imagine a farm worker living in the open
air, without food, water and proper sanitation. This was 2009. Come
2010, has the fate of the farm worker improved? Obviously not. Farm
workers' demands for better welfare have been sanitized and punctuated
as anti-government in different historical epochs
in Zimbabwe.
As GAPWUZ we have only two options:
that is fighting and fighting hard. The farm workers' struggle is like
an unending thread, they have to continuously keep unwinding it. Farm
workers have always been silent victims of a volatile political
onslaught. We therefore salute the fight to reject paltry salaries,
forced evictions and harassment, torture and abuse. We look ahead
to the restoration of the dignity, which is associated with every human
being. This was a profession, which was emulated as it put Zimbabwe on
the map as the bread basket for Africa.
The struggle for mankind through
history has been the struggle with nature and struggle with real or
imagined enemies in the form of human kind. Farm workers have been made
to pay dearly for their lives as they are being imagined 'real' enemies
of the Zanu PF land reform programme. Improvement of farm workers'
welfare in the era of the inclusive government should not come through
acts of accident but through design.
In Lenin's words there is no prescribed method of struggle. Each
method depends on the circumstances that exist at each particular
moment in an epoch (era).
ENDS
For further information:
Gertrude Hambira - Secretary General
General Plantation and Agricultural Workers' Union of
Zimbabwe - Harare
Tel: +263 4 734 141
Cell: +263 912 263 557
E-mail: gertrudehambira@hotmail.com
E-mail: giftmutisamas@yahoo.com

