As standards of living in Zimbabwe continue to deteriorate, the use of child labour on farms has risen sharply, with more than 10 000 children estimated to be working in the agricultural sector.
Irin recently reported that new commercial farmers, the beneficiaries of the government’s controversial land redistribution programme, were struggling to pay labourers.
“According to statistics, an average family needs Z$28-million [about R1 700] a month to meet its basic requirements. However, our members are being paid Z$600 000 [about R36] a month, which is only enough to buy a bar of soap and cooking oil. This has exposed children to abuse by commercial farmers, who are making them work on their farms in exchange for a free education in farm schools,” Gertrude Hambira, secretary general of the General Agricultural and Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe, alleged.
New farmers using child labourers in exchange for an education have dubbed the system “learn as you earn”.
Hambira added that because the wages of farm workers could not sustain their families, children were also being employed to supplement family incomes. “In some instances we have cases of parents and their young children all working on the farm so that they can pool their earnings to buy food and other basic necessities,” she said.
Hambira said some of the children working on farms had been displaced last year by the government’s Operation Murambatsvina — an urban clean-up campaign. “In addition, children are now dropping out of school because school fees are beyond their reach, as some government schools are charging fees of Z$400 000 [about R24] a term,” she added.
Hambira told Irin that her association would seek the assistance of Unicef to end labour by children under 16 on farms.
“We are finalising our reports, which we want to bring to the attention of Unicef, so that they can intervene and protect the rights of children. Children should be in schools and not working on farms,” said Hambira.
Wellington Chibebe, secretary general of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, warned that if the government did not stop child labour on farms, the union would take its case to the International Labour Organisation, a move that could result in a boycott of the country’s farm produce.
“There are rampant cases of child labour on the farms — some of them owned by very senior government officials — and we have told the relevant authorities to intervene. We will not accept the abuse of children on the farms,” Chibebe stressed.
Davidson Mugabe, president of the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union, said the “learn as you earn” concept was beneficial to children. “The new farmers are doing a good job of ensuring that young children get an education — there is no sinister agenda.”
However, Gift Muti, another senior union official, told Irin that the concept did more harm than good. “Children under that scheme have generally performed poorly in school because they … [are] too exhausted. As a result, most just [end up being] farm labourers like their parents.”