Introduction
A Copperbelt boom of three decades was followed by a period of severe and sustained economic decline, involving the collapse of international mineral prices, growing corporate and state indebtedness, political manipulation of company operations and the increasing role of international financial institutions (IFIs) in the mining industry. From the late 1970s until the early 2000s, mineworkers and their families and, in different ways, the wider Copperbelt communities, experienced a profound decline in living standards. This was a period not only of falling real wages and the loss of tens of thousands of formal sector jobs but also the decline and then collapse of much of the quasi-governmental control of residential areas and social provision that characterised company operations during the Copperbelt’s ‘golden age’.
This chapter briefly explores the causes and effects of this decline, identifying how debt conditionality enabled the IFIs – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – to play an increasingly prominent role in managing the region’s mines, periodically co-operating and clashing with state elites over control of operations and revenue. The Copperbelt was closely studied by IFI experts, who characterised both its industry and society as in urgent need of adjustment. The chapter uses IFI documents to explore the economic and social effects of decline on Copperbelt communities and to explain how they became central to elite knowledge and discourse about the region. In discussing interviewees’ characterisation of the timing, causes and consequences of these interlinked economic, social and political crises, the chapter identifies both common themes and cross-border differences in how this period of historical decline is remembered. In the early 1990s, partly as a result of their regimes’ inability to resolve their economic crises, both Zambia and the DRC experienced movements for political reform. While the Zambian Copperbelt’s history of autonomous trade unionism and self-conscious cosmopolitanism helped enable the relatively peaceful transition of the country to a liberal democracy, Haut-Katanga’s strategic and troublesome position within the Zairian body politic made it a key focus of state repression and politically mobilised ethnic violence, which together effectively derailed political reform. The contrasting outcomes of these movements were partly shaped by the different perceptions of the relationship between Copperbelt societies, mineral wealth and urban identities explored in previous chapters.
In both countries, however, elite actors, national and international, agreed that the Copperbelt needed urgent reform: corporations and communities that had once been characterised as the cutting edge of African modernity were now inefficient, uncompetitive and a constraint to the new modernising forces of globalisation and entrepreneurship. It was therefore necessary to divest soon-to-be privatised companies of their societal obligations. This process, implemented before and during the privatisations of the late 1990s and early 2000s, involved ostensibly rational economic processes in which responsibility for social provision was handed to Copperbelt communities themselves. These processes were, however, marked by official anxiety that Copperbelt residents lacked the entrepreneurial skills and mindset for this new form of modernity.
The chapter does not analyse the problematic and at times corrupt privatisation of ZCCM and Gécamines, which has been documented elsewhere.Footnote 1 Nor does it address in detail the post-2000 Copperbelt that has evolved in the wake of privatisation and in the context of a Chinese-led mining boom that has once again transformed the fortunes of the region’s mining industry and, to a lesser extent, its communities.Footnote 2 It does, however, draw on interviews, alongside archival material, to explore contemporary understanding of the impact of neo-liberalism on Copperbelt society. While many interviewees agree that this was a period in which shared prosperity and company paternalism was destroyed, some believe the era of liberalisation created new opportunities for individual freedom and self-mastery. In articulating their memories of the Copperbelt’s decline, interviewees have, as always, framed their characterisation of this and earlier periods in relation to their understanding of the present day. From the late 1980s, the decline in living standards of Copperbelt mineworkers and their families provided the context for historical and ethnographic studies that identified how those populations characterised their precarious and diminished existence in relation to a fondly remembered golden past – a past that, as this study has shown, was never the reality for most Copperbelt residents. Ferguson’s seminal ethnography of Luanshya in the late 1980s captured the mood of dissonance, pessimism and nostalgia rooted in a memory of better times associated with high wages and company social provision.Footnote 3 Mususa’s mid-2000s anthropological study of Luanshya explored the precarious lives of Copperbelt residents, particularly women, as they struggled to survive in a neo-liberal environment where mine company services had withered or entirely disappeared. Mususa engages more critically than Ferguson with the periodisation of decline articulated by her respondents, noting how the need to supplement low mine salaries with trading was a sign of economic decline even in the 1980s.Footnote 4
In Haut-Katanga, Dibwe dia Mwembu’s interviews in the late 1990s and early 2000s provide similar evidence of nostalgia, there rooted in the notion that company services reflected a genuine if authoritarian paternalism.Footnote 5 Rubbers’ research shows how this assertion of an unproblematic ‘golden age’ enables retrenched workers to make claims on the companies that had abandoned them.Footnote 6 Dibwe dia Mwembu’s Katangese interviewees overwhelmingly situate the region’s decline in the post-1990 period, during which the linked political and economic crises that brought the mining industry to its knees were followed by war and a disastrous privatisation process. It is, however, clear to many of our interviewees that the roots of these crises lay in the unresolved tensions of the Mobutu period, during which company social infrastructure was already in decline. Our interviewees provided explanations for this rooted in the political manipulation of the mining industry, but disagreed about who was to blame.
The impact of nostalgia on memory is widely seen as a problem for historians to overcome but it is arguably no more problematic than the assumption of historical progress, which was, until recently, hegemonic in social scientific research. While nostalgia is in contemporary African studies often linked to a longing for the colonial era, in the Copperbelt it is more closely associated with the post-colonial period of corporate welfarism, recalled in comparison with its recent decline.Footnote 7 Certainly, capturing a history that encompasses both real experiences of social and economic decline and memories of it shaped by nostalgic narratives carries with it the challenge of accounting for the ways in which popular discourse about the past has been shaped by both the common and specific experiences of diverse sections of the Katangese and Zambian Copperbelt’s communities, something to which this chapter makes a modest contribution. The juxtaposition of material decline to nostalgia for better times is not, however, designed to expose the accuracy of respondents’ memories or to counterpose historical ‘reality’ to the fallibility and political utility of nostalgia.Footnote 8 Rather, the aim is to draw attention to the ways in which the different meanings of this ‘better past’ and characterisations and explanations of ‘decline’ reflect diverse interpretations and experience, particularly for those residents whose interests were only indirectly linked to mining. While it is evident that mine companies provided far better services to their workers and immediate families in the remembered past than either companies or states do today, the historical significance of such provision and its loss are more varied. While many interviewees highlight positive aspects of company paternalism, others recall the ‘golden age’ as one of suffocating control and emphasise the opportunities created by its demise.
Cross-Border Decline, 1975–1989
From the mid-1970s, the central African Copperbelt became associated with economic decline and, within a few years, was characterised as an uncompetitive dinosaur, requiring radical reform to survive. The collapse of international mineral prices, coupled with a general adverse shift in the terms of trade, caused Zambia’s GDP to fall 25 per cent between 1974 and 1977. The mistaken belief that this was a reversible hiatus led to stimulatory spending and, via mechanisms such as the 1976 IMF standby agreement, enduring indebtedness. Zambia already had an effectively unpayable debt by 1978.Footnote 9 Likewise in Zaire, the World Bank provided Gécamines with a US$100m loan to bridge what was wrongly assumed to be a brief slowdown: ‘[m]edium term prospects for export earnings and government revenues are good. After a decline in 1975, world copper prices are expected to recover substantially over the remainder of the decade’.Footnote 10 Copperbelt mineral production was also hurt by the increasing cost and difficulty of exports, greatly disrupted by the closure of the Lobito export route as a result of the Angolan conflict and Zambia’s closure of its border with Rhodesia in 1973.
In this context, political tension grew between Zaire and Zambia, reflecting both countries’ economic difficulties, as well as their divergent political alignments in the context of an increasingly violent southern African liberation struggle. For example, in 1977, state-controlled Zambian newspapers decried Zairians’ use of Zambian schools and hospitals, alongside allegations that Zairian military planes had dropped bombs inside Zambian territory.Footnote 11 The border itself became a means of survival and a source of scarce goods: at Mokambo, Zambian women traders bought textiles that were in short supply south of the border, while shortages in Zaire were offset by the smuggling of price-controlled Zambian goods such as maize meal, clothing and petrol.Footnote 12 Zairian residents of Zambia were periodically detained and deported, despite their claims that they had been living in Zambia since before independence (see also Chapter 6).Footnote 13
Zaire’s mining-dependent economy was badly hit by the May 1978 Shaba II invasion. This brief occupation of Kolwezi by ex-Katangese gendarmes, the killing of European workers taken hostage and its violent repression by Western military forces, exposed the vulnerability of the Zairian regime.Footnote 14 In the midst of Shaba II, Mobutu accused Zambia of harbouring Katangese rebels, something angrily denied by President Kaunda.Footnote 15 The participation of 200 Katangese dissidents in Zambia’s foiled 1980 coup attempt ran alongside continued allegations of military incursions and soldiers’ involvement in smuggling, looting and vehicle theft.Footnote 16 The end of Zimbabwe’s liberation war brought about limited rapprochement, marked by summits bringing together Kaunda, Mobutu and other southern African leaders, for example in Lubumbashi in July 1980.Footnote 17 The two countries sought to co-operate in managing the sale of cobalt and in 1981 a joint border commission was established to address tensions.Footnote 18 Nonetheless, the periodic harassment and rounding up of ‘illegal aliens’ and allegations about the smuggling of price-controlled goods continued to the late 1980s.Footnote 19 A stereotype emerged among Zambians of their Zairian neighbours as materialistic, corrupt and involved in illegal activities, enabled by possession of Zambian national identity cards.Footnote 20 For some interviewees, rising crime and cross-border insecurity were characteristic of the crisis:
It was in 1982 or 1983. The whole of Copperbelt they started putting [burglar bars on windows and doors] … because burglars would come and break the window pane then come in. … During Mobutu’s era, it was real terrible. … We used to lose three to four vehicles every night here in Mufulira … the next day it’s in Congo.Footnote 21
Mining was sheltered from the worst aspects of decline until the mid-1980s, as states, IFIs and donors sought to ring-fence this crucial economic sector. Economic diversification was increasingly urgent but, in the immediate term, mining continued to be the region’s economic lifeline. In practice, the mining sector served as a cash cow that was drained to feed other economic priorities, whether the patronage projects of senior politicians or debt repayment to donors. The limited availability of foreign exchange resulted in an exodus of skilled expatriate staff and shortages of expensive mine equipment that adversely affected production. While many attempts at reform and austerity were announced, few were effectively implemented.
Haut-Katanga: Corruption, Conflict and Control
In Zaire, economic decline was exacerbated by the political manipulation of mining revenue, the primary source of foreign exchange earnings. The establishment of SOZACOM (Société Zairoise de Commercialisation des Minerals) in 1974 enabled the Mobutu regime to conduct off-the-book cobalt sales and divert revenue from Gécamines.Footnote 22 In 1981, former Prime Minister Nguza Karl I Bond testified to the US Congress regarding the massive corruption involved, as the Wall Street Journal reported: ‘Mr. Nguza claims that President Mobutu himself skimmed tens of millions of dollars last year from the state-owned Gécamines mining company and from foreign aid’.Footnote 23
By the late 1970s, when Zaire already owed Western governments US$4.7bn, IFI reform efforts focussed on Gécamines. The IMF found that its workers’ living standards had declined considerably:
purchasing power, between 01/07/74 and 01/01/79, had fallen by 50.1% for senior African personnel … Following the devaluation of the Zaire, social tension had become such that the Management Committee had to take provisional measures to reduce this tension … a decision was taken, in February 1979, to increase the additional allowance from 15,000 to 35,000 Z. Last March, a base salary increase of 25% was granted.Footnote 24
Donor officials were continually frustrated by such ad hoc pay rises as a response to rampant inflation.Footnote 25 In its relationship with Western powers and IFIs, Zaire adopted what Young and Turner memorably term the ‘diplomacy of bankruptcy’: seeking to avoid loan conditions by bilateral appeals to Mobutu’s Cold War allies, the United States and France.Footnote 26 Acquiring accurate financial data was virtually impossible for an economy where ‘corruption’ was sanctioned and practised at the top of government. Unrealistically high targets for copper production – necessary to support unfounded claims that the company could balance its books over the medium-term – were continually missed. Gécamines underwrote the railway company SNCZ and the electricity generator SNEL, as well as politically prestigious construction projects.Footnote 27 The company was, like ZCCM, starved of the foreign exchange it needed to purchase equipment and pay expatriate workers.Footnote 28 In a typical IFI analysis from 1978, a World Bank official reported
that the autonomy of the company was threatened and that due to political interference from above, there was no follow up on expenses while some receipts were diverted … there was a total erosion of management, no control over productivity, morale was very low … serious problems of staffing were threatening the production level in the coming months. … Gécamines does not control either its receipts or its expenditures.Footnote 29
Mobutu’s corrupt governance provides for many Copperbelt interviewees a powerful explanation of decline, characterised both by its economic effects and the daily humiliations of authoritarian rule:
We suffered with Mobutu. The officials of Mobutu, who had not even studied, disturbed, humiliated, extorted. You can’t buy a shirt with your own money: when leaving the store, a Mobutu agent asks you to present your baptism document, for example. We needed freedom.Footnote 30
Gécamines Chef de Cité Jérôme Mulunda, however, balances the negative experience of political repression with the comparative economic stability of the period.Footnote 31 Others, like Mwanza Lukinde, have only positive memories of life under Mobutu:
President Mobutu’s period, for us from Gécamines, was a good period. … we had our salary every month. We had our allowances as it should be, the labour code was well respected. We had advantages that allowed us to live well. … we had food, we could buy vehicles; in short, it was good.Footnote 32
For Musale Kibombo, Katanga’s economic decline resulted not only from Mobutu’s exploitation but also his unwelcome opening of the province to outsiders: ‘When Mobutu came to power, with his slogan of one country, one father, one mother, people came from all over to Katanga. This is where it started to degenerate’.Footnote 33 Gaston Mutiti explains Gécamines’ decline in the context of its longstanding ‘exploitation’ by external Congolese actors and its occupation by foreign soldiers during and after the Shaba wars:
[They] … resented the Katangese, Mobutu and all those around him. … the problem started with the two [Shaba] wars … during this period, we, all Congolese, we did what we called the war effort. So you know, the people [were] being very badly paid … When a minister came here on a mission, he was paid on a mission but he had to arrive at Gécamines, asking that he be given some money … The guesthouses are Gécamines. So, everything weighed on Gécamines, so much so that the company found itself in the situation, people were so badly paid, everything was finished.Footnote 34
Zaire’s indebtedness and Mobutu’s increasingly limited room for manoeuvre led to the abolition of SOZACOM in 1984 and to a more transparent mineral sales system. International financial institutions promoted economic liberalisation policies – devaluation, price decontrols and spending controls – that had a deflationary effect, as the World Bank acknowledged in 1986: ‘Soaring debt service payments in local currency terms, have necessitated massive cuts in salaries, expenditures on goods and services, and investment expenditures in real terms’.Footnote 35 The IFIs increasingly directed Gécamines management decisions, for example by vetting senior appointments and overseeing the hiring of a Belgian customs team to investigate smuggling.Footnote 36 A new 1986 World Bank loan of US$110m was conditional on the full autonomy of Gécamines’ management from state authority.Footnote 37 That agreement characterised the company’s social wage as a problem to be addressed:
compensation policies need to be reviewed. While salaries have not kept up with inflation, the company offers generous fringe benefits (free housing, schooling and medical care and subsidized food prices). As a result, absenteeism has been growing and low salaries are a deterrent to hiring competent technical personnel.Footnote 38
In 1989 it was agreed that ‘all dividend payments by GÉCAMINES must obtain prior approval from the World Bank’.Footnote 39 That year, Katanga’s largest underground mine at Kamoto collapsed, causing a huge loss in mineral production. Attempts at external financial regulation proved insufficient to arrest the growing economic and political crisis that would soon engulf Zaire.
While Mobutu’s regime struggled to maintain control over Gécamines finances in the face of IFI intervention, it was more successful in controlling political expression in Katanga/Shaba. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the MPR strengthened its presence in mine cités, building on and merging with the company’s existing structures. Officials of the party and its youth wing, the Jeunesse du Mouvement Populaire de la Révolution (JMPR), were closely involved in overseeing mine communities. This enlarged conceptualisation of nationalised company paternalism is evident in Gécamines CEO Umba Kayamitala’s New Year message to workers in 1976:
1975 has certainly been a difficult year, characterised mainly by the fallout from the economic crisis which shook the whole world. To deal with this crisis, the Guide to the Zairian Revolution [Mobutu] took drastic measures and invited us all to make sacrifices. I owe it to you to share with you the pride I feel in the discipline, in the self-denial, in a word the militancy that you have shown in this difficult and momentary conjuncture.Footnote 40
With the establishment that year of JMPR committees in workplaces, party control of the company was strengthened: ‘The Gécamines family indeed wants to be strong, united, counting on each of its children. … May the year 1976 find you armed with a will to do well the work entrusted to you in order to achieve the objectives assigned by the nation’.Footnote 41 Workers were enjoined, at workplace party seminars and in the pages of Mwana Shaba, to make ‘revolutionary’ sacrifices in the national interest.Footnote 42 Meanwhile, the Gécamines’ cultural events that invoked company paternalism had morphed into ‘animations politiques’, parades with marching bands and singing that celebrated both the company and Mobutu (Chapter 7).Footnote 43
It was, however, increasingly clear that, as Gécamines CEO Robert Crem admitted in Mwana Shaba in 1983, company social services would be severely cut:
The fact that Gécamines houses its staff, provides medical treatment, sells items at reduced prices in order to safeguard the purchasing power of the worker … leads the company to be given the unflattering epithet of paternalism. … as a historical phenomenon, paternalism could well be justified at its beginnings, but not indefinitely.Footnote 44
Zambia: Liberation, Losses and Labour Unrest
In the late 1970s, Zambia experienced a similarly devastating economic downturn, together with an increased military threat from racist southern African regimes. Kaunda was lauded internationally for supporting regional liberation movements but – for some interviewees – this support came at their expense, as they experienced food and commodity shortages.Footnote 45 Dennis Tembo recalls: ‘Kaunda used to tell us to suffer so that we can help liberate the neighbouring countries’.Footnote 46 Henry Longwane links falling real wages to the same issue:
[We were] [w]worse off, those days during the Kaunda era, we would even be paid amounts which could not even buy a bag of charcoal. … Kaunda was taking out a lot of money to go and fight for independence for other countries such as Zimbabwe and Namibia and this was known by everyone countrywide.Footnote 47
The widespread labour unrest of Zambia’s First Republic was a thing of the past, as formal sector employment stagnated and real wages fell. As the World Bank reported, the value of ZCCM salaries collapsed between 1970 and 1983:
mineworkers (ZCCM) have gone through a much larger decline in real wages than other groups of workers. Whereas mineworkers used to be much better paid than government unskilled workers in 1970, by the early 1980s their wages had fallen to a level in line with other better-paid unskilled workers.Footnote 48
Although the characterisation of mineworkers as a labour aristocracy was no longer viable, donor policy continued to be influenced by the notion that Zambia had a uniquely problematic urban society whose residents benefited from consumption subsidies that damaged the rural economy and fuelled urban migration. Bates and Collier argued that Zambia’s political system ‘induced a systematic bias in favour of the formation of state industries, the conferral of consumer subsidies, and the control of prices. The pattern of policy bias systematically favoured urban consumers’.Footnote 49 Potts later showed that population growth in Copperbelt towns was, by the 1980s, lower than the national average and that the population of some towns, including Mufulira, was actually falling.Footnote 50 Nonetheless, the IFIs’ increasingly influential neo-liberal policy recommendations viewed state-led industrial development as inherently problematic.Footnote 51 ‘Market reforms’ and the resultant huge rises in living costs were seen as a necessary price to pay to create a free market economy.
These policies shaped conflict between the Zambian state and Copperbelt labour unions over the long delayed integration of mine townships into local government structures in 1980–1 (see also Chapter 3).Footnote 52 This integration, designed to reduce the quality and cost of social service provision to mineworkers and their families, prompted a major wave of industrial action and led the government to suspend most ZCTU and MUZ leaders.Footnote 53 Striking mineworkers rioted and some were shot by police – 58 people were seriously wounded and K20m (c.US$15m) of mine production was lost.Footnote 54 In August 1981, four senior labour leaders, including MUZ officials and ZCTU Chairman Frederick Chiluba, were detained, accused of using the strike action for political ends.Footnote 55 Zambian mine townships and, to a lesser extent, the wider Copperbelt, were from this point forward the centre of unofficial opposition to UNIP.
By the early 1980s the IFIs were convinced that the main barrier to establishing a more market-oriented economy was the government’s inability to make its urban population poorer:
Since the mid-1970’s, Zambia has attempted a succession of adjustment programs supported by Fund arrangements, but most have foundered because of unexpected declines in copper prices and the inability to reduce domestic expenditure in line with the fall in income and export earnings.Footnote 56
The establishment of Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines (ZCCM) in 1982, an initiative driven by donor demands for greater efficiency in the loss-making industry, is recalled by many mineworkers as consolidating state elites’ manipulation of mining:
There was a time when they just combined all the divisions and it became ZCCM, that was the time when there was a problem because all the monies that was supposed to end here was taken to Lusaka and they could share there. So here, there were times when the operations were paralysed because money was not enough to run the mining operations.Footnote 57
The failure of economic liberalisation was blamed by IFIs on mine companies characterised as inefficient and unproductive, whose managers were unable or unwilling to implement the ‘painful’ measures necessary to ‘modernise’ their operations and workforce. A 1984 report stated: ‘there is a general lack of discipline among mine workers attributable to the weaknesses of the managerial structure and to the lack of incentives built into the wage structure’. The necessary ‘rationalisation’ of ZCCM operations involved the ‘closing of uneconomical operations and permanent or temporary release of some labor, with their far-reaching social consequences’.Footnote 58 The wider reform programme necessitated reducing urban living standards in general and on the Copperbelt in particular. A far-reaching adjustment programme implemented under World Bank auspices from 1986 involved the removal of price controls, a new auction system to allocate foreign exchange and other market-oriented reforms.Footnote 59 Kaunda justified the resultant hardships in a characteristically ruralist speech that replicated typically colonial perspectives regarding urban unemployment:
Every Zambian has a village to go back to. … If you have no job in town you are not supposed to be here. You are supposed to be at your village, producing crops. Life has become hard for the urban dweller because of the high prices. On the other hand, the high prices of agricultural crops now make agriculture more attractive. … Loafers, look out! It may soon be too expensive for you to stay in town.Footnote 60
In December 1986 the removal of subsidies caused a doubling in the maize meal price, panic buying, shortages and widespread rioting on the Copperbelt.Footnote 61 A curfew was imposed in Kitwe and fifteen people were killed by the police.Footnote 62 Following ZCTU criticism of the IMF, the price rises were reversed. Workers sought compensatory wage increases for rising prices through unofficial strikes. Kaunda initially claimed ‘the initiators of the strikes were politically motivated’.Footnote 63 However, the entire IMF programme was cancelled on May Day 1987, demonstrating the ability of popular mobilisation to change government policy and the weakness of the one-party state regime.
A subsequent UNIP ‘home-grown’ reform programme, including measures such as a minimum wage, was opposed by the IFIs because it ‘would have an adverse effect on investment and growth’.Footnote 64 By 1989, the government again accepted the need to implement reforms demanded by donors, including the removal of all food subsidies and the steady alignment of official and market exchange rates. Cuts were implemented to government budgets, but IMF officials presented a profoundly pessimistic view of Zambia’s economic prospects, partly because of urban resistance to its policies:
Zambia’s main copper mine will be depleted in about a decade and we project that the purchasing power of Zambia’s copper exports at the turn of the century will be only 20 percent of what it is today.Footnote 65
It is clear that, even with the best of intentions, Zambia cannot fully service its external arrears and due maturities on a sustainable basis without causing serious dislocations to the economy and probably internal social unrest.Footnote 66
Despite this, mining remained, in IFI policy assumptions, the economic mainstay in the medium term. Although copper’s contribution to GDP had fallen from 38 per cent in 1970 to 15 per cent in 1988, it still represented 85 per cent of exports.Footnote 67
Manifestations of the Crisis
On the ground, the growing crisis manifested itself in a substantial decline of economic and social conditions across the Copperbelt. The value of real wages had fallen drastically and some skilled African workers, like their European counterparts, implemented exit strategies. Patson Katwisi took early retirement aged 53, in a period of job cuts: ‘at that time the mines became far much worse. Miners started facing a lot of problems. So the so called suffering found in [mine] companies taught me to be on my own’.Footnote 68
Mine companies produced evidence not only of this decline but also of their own reduced control over their communities. In 1988 an inventory was compiled by Gécamines officials of informal and illegal activities taking place in the company-owned houses of Likasi mineworkers. These included churches and small businesses; in some cases, new structures had been built to house these activities.Footnote 69 Meanwhile, school classes were taking place in classrooms without doors or glass in windows and some workers were not receiving their food rations.Footnote 70 Management meetings involving company, MPR and union representatives provided a forum for complaints about the deteriorating quality of township life. A single meeting in March 1989 in Likasi discussed rising insecurity, water supply problems, infestations of cockroaches and mosquitos, the lack of glass in windows and doors for houses, waste disposal problems, the theft of taps and transportation problems. These actors disputed and sought to identify who was to blame. Citoyen Muzinga, a JMPR representative, asserted: ‘There are too many cases of theft being reported in our cités. We suspect that people are coming from outside. They steal everything including the copper alloy waste on the mine site’.Footnote 71 While company officials accused workers of complicity in the theft of materials, union representatives criticised the corrupt allocation of jobs by senior state and company officials to their relatives and friends and asked rhetorically what workers who did not have friends in high places could do.Footnote 72
In 1987, prompted by the December 1986 ‘food riots’ (see above) in which mine township youth had played a prominent role, ZCCM conducted a major investigation into community services. This sought ‘[t]o establish the youth population in each Mine township by reviewing the number of dependent children under the age of 25 years per household’.Footnote 73 The report found that 59.1 per cent of the township population were below fifteen years of age and 71.9 per cent were twenty-five or under. This knowledge production exercise was noteworthy for going beyond company-controlled territory to investigate conditions in the ‘shanty townships bordering Mine areas’. The report, which focussed on Nkana/Kitwe, offered a devastating account of decline: mine ‘townships are in an advanced state of decay; the remains of what once used to be roads are clogged with refuse; open sewerage systems and gutters pollute the atmosphere and pose a real health hazard to inhabitants’.Footnote 74 Houses had broken windows, rotten fittings and had (as in Likasi) been adorned with ‘illegal extensions’. Soccer pitches and tennis courts were overgrown and cinema halls were disused.
The team observed, in all mine townships visited, that large groups of youths and children gathered on street corners and at markets, bars and bus stops, making some areas inaccessible to outsiders and ZCCM officials.Footnote 75 They controlled markets and ‘charge protection money (rent) and impose their own version of law and order’.Footnote 76 In five shanty towns neighbouring ZCCM townships, there were no community services and just one health clinic, which lacked permanent staff or facilities. Recognising that disease did not obey official demarcations, ZCCM was already spraying for mosquitos in two of the shanty towns. The breakdown of distinctions between township and informal settlements was also manifest in the fact that shanty dwellings were built from company materials such as ‘metal roofing, mainly drumsheets most of which were labelled “ZCCM”’.Footnote 77 The report perceptively noted: ‘[a] symbiotic relationship exists between Mine Townships … and shanty townships’.Footnote 78 Acts of ‘vandalism of houses in Mine townships for window/door frames and roofing materials [were carried out to enable their] sale in the shanty townships’, while ‘shanty townships provide cheap accommodation for unhoused Mine employees, domestic servants, security guards and general workers’.Footnote 79 Strikingly, the research team was initially greeted with hostility in informal settlements when they were thought to be UNIP or government officials: co-operation followed when it became clear that they were from ZCCM. The opposite occurred in the mine townships, whose ‘inhabitants are hostile towards ZCCM officials and property because they believe that the Company has ceased to care about them’.Footnote 80
The report found that women’s programmes and youth development schemes lacked qualified staff and vital equipment; ‘vandalism and thefts … have reduced community centres in some townships to shells’.Footnote 81 Spending on community services in Nkana and Mufulira had fallen by 33–50 per cent between 1975 and 1986. The report identified that the ‘problem’ of unemployed youths arose from ‘[l]arge families (average size 9) and polygamy [that] mitigate[s] against the provision of effective supervision and guidance of children by parents’.Footnote 82 It recommended that ‘the Company should take measures to control the number of dependants outside the immediate family to ease pressure on services’ and conduct family planning campaigns.Footnote 83 It also sought the ‘[s]trict enforcement of the provisions of the Tenancy Agreements’ and the ‘[d]emolition of all illegal structures’ in mine townships.Footnote 84
Political Transition and Conflict, 1990–1993
The early 1990s saw a movement for political and economic change sweep across Africa, inspired by the fall of communism but driven primarily by local discontent with the social and political order.Footnote 85 While Zambia experienced a largely peaceful transition from one-party state to liberal democracy, the pro-democracy movement in Zaire was violently suppressed by state forces and derailed by Mobutu’s divide-and-rule tactics and the fuelling of ethnic violence.Footnote 86 Zambian Copperbelt actors in general, and its labour movement in particular, were central to the success of the Movement for Multi-party Democracy (MMD) in ousting UNIP and establishing a new government led by ZCTU leader Frederick Chiluba. As I have argued elsewhere, the MMD’s success was partly built on the successful defence of labour movement autonomy in the 1980s and its ability to resist ethno-regional divide-and-rule was informed by the self-conscious cosmopolitanism of Copperbelt political discourse.Footnote 87 The Zambian labour movement, rooted in Copperbelt urban society, was, as a result, able to play a far more significant political role than on the continent in general and certainly when compared with its Congolese counterpart.
While the Zambian Copperbelt was, in late 1991, celebrating the MMD’s victory, the mining towns of Haut-Katanga/Shaba were consumed in a growing crisis that would ultimately be resolved only by the armed overthrow of Mobutu in 1997 by Laurent Kabila and his regional backers. Following Mobutu’s legalisation of a multi-party system in April 1990, initiatives to bring about democratic change focussed on an opposition-led Sovereign National Conference (CNS) that, however, failed to reach agreement on the country’s political future. Zaire’s Gécamines-dependent economy was, meanwhile, collapsing. Management’s attempt to radically reduce costs included a 20 per cent cut in its workforce, but this was, as Rubbers states, ‘thwarted by strikes by workers, provoked by the deterioration in their standard of living, and looting, which razed the entire fabric of small and medium-size enterprises in 1991’.Footnote 88 In September and October that year, the central retail areas of Lubumbashi, Likasi and Kolwezi were looted and burnt, in attacks that, it is widely believed, were orchestrated by the Mobutu regime.Footnote 89 Popular opposition was, meanwhile, brutally crushed. In May 1990, security forces killed at least one hundred students at the University of Lubumbashi who were demonstrating for political reform.Footnote 90
Mobutu maintained his precarious hold on power by an increasingly short-term manipulation of mineral wealth and of latent ethnic tensions. When the CNS appointed Étienne Tshisekedi as Prime Minister in August 1992, the opposition had already been weakened by defections from the UFERI (Union des Fédéralistes et Républicains Indépendants) party. Prominent UFERI leader Gabriel Kyungu wa Kumwanza was appointed Shaba governor in November 1991. Mwana Shaba, reporting Kyungu’s arrival in hagiographic tones, celebrated his appointment as the first governor of local origin in twenty-four years and emphasised
his deep attachment to his region of origin. His determination to defend its interests was not without harsh criticism and even the antipathy of those who considered Shaba as a conquered territory whose tribute had to be taken, whatever the cost. … as soon as he got off the plane, he bowed and kissed the ground, a way for him to worship ancestors and express his attachment to the land that nourished him since childhood.Footnote 91
Kyungu, having promised to govern Shaba’s people regardless of region or ethnicity, unleashed a campaign of intimidation and violence against Katangese residents of Kasaian origin. Gécamines was targeted by UFERI militants; thousands of its long-standing workers and their families were forced to flee.Footnote 92 Kyungu also organised unofficial shipments of cobalt to Zambia by Mobutu’s Division Spéciale Présidentielle (DSP) that provided the presidency with a precious source of revenue.Footnote 93
For some interviewees such as Thérèse Kyola, this violence marked the end of the company community: ‘This has been ever since the period of inter-ethnic conflicts; before, we were all together. With the Katangese–Kasaian conflicts, for example, people started to be afraid of being killed’.Footnote 94 François Kake recalls: ‘My wife is from Kasai and with these politicized wars, I could not for example tolerate that people kill my wife or my children. … It was difficult to live at that time’.Footnote 95 For others, the communitarianism of this period is explained as a normal human response to crisis, for example by Emile Ngoy Muyondwe:
When there is a crisis, very often we rally around the closest. When the crisis came, I remember there were selected payments, since the money was not enough for everyone. Under these conditions, the officials tended to select their friends, their brothers from the same tribe. We experienced that. The crisis can lead to tribalism.Footnote 96
On both sides of the border, the early 1990s saw the value of cash wages decline drastically and there were periodic food shortages. Philippe Kalenda remembers: ‘We even sold household items like televisions to find food. We traded with villagers from neighbouring villages’.Footnote 97 Farming as a survival measure carried its own dangers: Marie José Kapya Katolo recalls an attempted sexual assault by a soldier in 1992 while she was farming.Footnote 98 Zambian nurse Mary Nomba recalls: ‘people suffered from kwashiorkor, malnutrition and they were brought in the hospital and we fed children from the hospital who had such cases’.Footnote 99 Lesa Kanyanta reports that, as MUZ’s Kitwe Branch Chairman, he negotiated with ZCCM to provide maize meal directly to mineworkers, a reversal of the cash-only wages that had, in the early 1960s, been a symbol of Zambian mineworkers’ modernity.Footnote 100
Selling the Copperbelt: Liberalisation and Privatisation
Zaire’s crisis continued throughout the 1990s. Copper production, which had peaked at 538,000 tonnes in 1986, collapsed to just 48,000 tonnes in 1993. Nine thousand workers left Gécamines that year as a result of ethnic violence.Footnote 101 ‘Crisis actions’ necessitated sweeping cuts to the company's social provision: food supplies were significantly reduced and all cultural and sporting events cancelled to address the catastrophic financial situation. The country experienced a 42 per cent decline of GDP per head between 1990 and 1993.Footnote 102 Governmental paralysis was resolved only in 1994 with the appointment of Prime Minister Kengo wa Dondo, who had little choice but to accept the World Bank’s plans for restructuring and partly privatising Gécamines. Mobutu’s overthrow in 1997 by Katangese leader Laurent Kabila raised hopes that he would revive the province’s economic fortunes. Kabila, however, ceded control of the mining industry to the forces that kept his regime in power once he fell out with his Rwandan and Ugandan backers in 1998.Footnote 103 Billy Rautenbach’s appointment to lead Gécamines’ ‘recovery committee’ symbolised the effective mortgaging of the company to Zimbabwean military and business interests. While the company was looted at the top, on the ground Gécamines’ operations were opened up to artisanal diggers, some themselves former company workers.Footnote 104 Rubbers details the return of the World Bank to the DRC in 2001 to oversee the partial privatisation of the company in the early 2000s. This process involved the dismissal of tens of thousands of workers and the dismantling of most of Gécamines’ remaining social and welfare provision.Footnote 105
In Zambia in the early 1990s, the new MMD government, consistent with its own neo-liberal thinking and IFI debt conditionality, implemented one of Africa’s most radical economic liberalisation programmes. While many Copperbelt residents believed their democratically elected government would protect the mining industry from political interference, they did not anticipate the generalised decline in living standards that resulted from the removal of subsidies and the privatisation of most state-owned companies. Chiluba’s government was praised internationally for its willingness to meet donor demands, but the ultimate test of its neo-liberal credentials would be the privatisation of the mining industry.Footnote 106 The IFIs focussed on what they regarded as ZCCM’s unduly high social and labour costs:
The [IMF] mission was concerned that the economy as a whole would not benefit from the current high price of copper, but that instead it would be used, as in the past, to subsidize inefficient practices and unduly high labor costs. [It] … questioned the 25 per cent April wage increase, given the company’s very precarious financial situation. ZCCM management responded that … the unions had viewed the wage award as minimal in the light of inflation over the last year, and that [with] anything less there would have been an intolerable degree of labor unrest. The [IMF] staff representatives emphasised that such actions reinforced the necessity of moving ahead swiftly with the privatization of ZCCM.Footnote 107
Privatisation required ‘a program of joint-venturing and divestiture of ZCCM’s under-utilised or unused assets. … ZCCM would also reduce its involvement, through a variety of divestiture methods, in housing, transportation, schools, health service facilities as well as in other services which it currently operates’.Footnote 108 Early attempts at commercialising Mufulira’s worker canteens foundered on the supposed lack of a commercial mindset among the women recruited to run them: ‘Raw materials were not purchased from the cheapest sources and in short the enterprise did not meet the essential criteria of a viable commercial enterprise. … I anticipate that we would encounter the ever present problem of finding a suitably commercially minded person to take charge of the operation’.Footnote 109 As this indicates, being modern now meant being entrepreneurial and self-sufficient. The ZCCM publication Mining Mirror, covering a crime wave in Luanshya in 1996, proclaimed that the ‘[t]ime for ZCCM to be over-protective of its employees is a matter for the historians. Employees are being asked to take care of themselves’.Footnote 110 Company withdrawal from social and community service provision was presented as ‘decentralisation’ and ‘empowerment’:
it has been the practice for mining companies to provide community development services and recreational facilities to cater for the welfare of employees and their dependants [and] free housing to employees. However, in line with the changed national perspective, the Company’s present policy is to encourage home ownership. … the policy statement aims at encouraging coordinated activity and full participation of communities to enable them [to] contribute fully to national development.Footnote 111
While the sale of company housing to sitting tenants was widely popular among mineworkers, some company officials worried that new houseowners were insufficiently prepared for their new status: as Nkana’s General Manager wrote in 1998, ‘no attempt has been made to educate the labour force in the responsibilities and costs associated with home ownership’.Footnote 112 In the midst of the insecurity created by decline and privatisation, the sale of mine houses provided income via rental or a physical base for a small business. As Mususa explains, this measure radically transformed ‘mine’ townships: from an area where virtually all heads of household worked in the mines, by 2008 only half of the fifty-six households she surveyed had a resident employed in the formal sector.Footnote 113 By such means, many former mineworkers secured a permanent if fragile hold on urban residence that they never had as ZCCM employees, who lost their housing on retirement.
Comparison of the Kaunda era with the Chiluba presidency (1991–2001) provides, for many Zambians, a prism for interpreting the shift from state/company corporatism to democratic individualism, with the acquisition of houses its most prominent symbolic reference. For Simon Kampamba,
Kaunda was a dictator. We did not have a lot of things such as groceries and other stuffs. That is why God chose Chiluba who brought [the] open market and things started coming from other countries. It was during Chiluba’s era when I bought this house. The government realised that the houses were too old and needed to be sold to sitting tenants so that they can also own some property.Footnote 114
Victoria Mwelwa credits Chiluba for the sale of houses and for liberalisation in general: ‘During [the] Kaunda era, the government focussed on constructing roads and schools. During Chiluba, we were sold houses. Chiluba focussed on urban places [rather] than rural areas. … Through privatisation, Chiluba improved the socio-economic lives of people’.Footnote 115 Philip Mwape captures the ambiguous impact of liberalisation on many Copperbelt residents, wherein an era of shortages was followed by the availability of commodities for those with money: ‘Chiluba improved the transport system. Second, he paved way for people to buy things even from outside. Third, police brutality was stopped when Chiluba came to power and road-blocks reduced. There was now freedom of movement under Chiluba. But money became difficult to access despite availability of goods’.Footnote 116
Thus, for many interviewees who otherwise decry the loss of the services previously provided by ZCCM, the personal benefits of home ownership and the availability of goods and services are perceived as having improved economic opportunities, if not their actual living standards.
Diverse Memories of the ‘Golden Age’
Privatisation was followed by an unanticipated resurgence in mineral demand from China, which drastically reshaped the industry’s fortunes. Between 2002 and 2008 copper prices soared, bringing a wave of new investment, the opening of new mines and increased production at others. This did not, however, bring new formal-sector jobs or social provision: contemporary mining technology requires a smaller number of highly skilled workers and this core workforce is commonly combined with outsourcing to sub-contracting companies with significantly worse pay and conditions. In Zambia today, the mining industry, which produced 711,000 tonnes of copper in 2015, employs 28,933 ‘direct’ workers and 27,896 ‘contract’ workers.Footnote 117 Contemporary mine investors have sought to avoid direct provision of housing and other services and are often accused of favouring foreign contractors over local businesses. Gécamines remains an important if much diminished representative of state interests in the Katangese mining industry, while ZCCM-Investment Holdings, which manages the 15–20 per cent state ownership in Zambia’s privatised mines, otherwise presides over the unprofitable legacy of the older industry.
This largely ‘jobless’ boom has shaped political and social change in the region in ways that can only be summarised here. In Zambia, the failure of new mine investors to provide secure jobs and ‘care’ for their workers fuelled opposition leader Michael Sata’s populist political movement. Sata’s Patriotic Front (PF), by articulating a contemporary version of an enduring Copperbelt political discourse demanding the equitable distribution of mine wealth, succeeded in capturing the Zambian presidency in 2011.Footnote 118 Meanwhile, Moïse Katumbi became governor of Katanga province in 2007; he re-established governmental oversight of the anarchic post-war mining industry and created incentives for and restrictions on mine company operations that increased local tax revenues. While avoiding the exclusionary rhetoric of Kyungu, Katumbi nonetheless invoked the Katangese secession by, for example, erecting a prominent statue of Tshombe in central Lubumbashi. While Katangese politicians, like their Zambian counterparts, articulate a collective sense of injustice that wealth produced by their region continues to be enjoyed elsewhere – whether by off-shore mine companies or ruling politicians in distant capitals – such invocations may (in a context where ethnic associations remain central to political mobilisation) reawaken the autochthonous definition of Katangese identity associated with previous waves of anti-Kasaian violence.Footnote 119 On the Zambian Copperbelt, despite the willingness of the current PF government to deploy overtly ethnic politics, the popular consensus of interviewees remains that the region has never suffered ethnic violence because of its cosmopolitan nature.Footnote 120 These different trajectories reflect the two regions’ distinct histories, but equally show how those histories have shaped and been shaped by popular understandings of Copperbelt society that bear only a tangential relationship to historical reality but which are central to residents’ sense of identity.Footnote 121
This is the context in which memories of the Copperbelt’s history of growth and decline were articulated by our interviewees between 2017 and 2019. Unsurprisingly, many respondents counterpose today’s parlous economic opportunities to a prosperous past when mine companies ‘provided employment for a lot of people including young people’.Footnote 122 François Batabata Nsenga emphasises the pervasive impact of historical company activities:
At the time, with Gécamines, when its workers were paid there was an impact on everyone. … With today’s mining companies, you don’t really feel the impact. … Gécamines had good hospitals serving the whole population, good schools and good teachers. The current mining company has no schools, hospitals and workers are not paid well.Footnote 123
Trader Emery Bweupe recalls that the people who bought her goods were ‘families of the mineworkers. A lot of people were in employment and there was a lot of money way back’.Footnote 124 Andre Kasengo characterises the circulation of wages and benefits as a form of social solidarity:
If you had brothers who are Gécamines workers, they will share their rations with you! Since Gécamines employed a lot of people (35,000 workers), in the event of a crisis, it was all of Likasi that was also hit; but the day that Gécamines paid its workers, everyone benefitted; money flowed everywhere.Footnote 125
For Thompson Sichula, privatisation ‘has affected my business in many ways. Under ZCCM I used to have contracts with the mines, not now when the process is dominated by foreigners. There is also corruption. Way back we used to apply and the process was transparent, not now, you need strong connections’.Footnote 126
Many interviewees emphasise, like Victoria Mwelwa, the decline of once clean and well-ordered townships: ‘Yes, way back it used to be very clean but now it has become dirty. Way back they used to even inspect our houses, spray the area. Now they do not take care of the homes and this has increased diseases’.Footnote 127 Others, however, criticise the historical provision of such services:
There was a dependency syndrome on the mines. … You couldn’t buy something as simple as a bulb, you had to call maintenance. Because of that kind of life people were so relaxed they wouldn’t do anything but a fraction of things. … Such simple skills like fixing a light bulb was hard because of such dependency. A lot of our young people still can’t develop simple skills to help them think of ways to earn a living.Footnote 128
Pami wa Kasongo, while acknowledging the personal advancement he experienced as a result of mine employment, equally emphasises its constraining nature: ‘What I have become is thanks to Gécamines. The small investment I made from my salary allowed me to build this house … [working for Gécamines] … opened my mind and I learned a lot that … allowed me to escape this mentality of Gécamines workers’.Footnote 129 For William Chinda, liberalisation has removed inequality between mineworkers and other residents:
Such [a] type of living made people lazy. Wives to miners just stayed home. Except those in Chibolya, they would work. This time the market is even filled because everybody is a general worker. We had two classes. The miners and then us who weren’t part of the mine. Now we are all the same.Footnote 130
Other interviewees analyse lost company services such as youth and women’s centres by comparing contemporary disorder with a somewhat romanticised past. Evans Nsabashi, for example, complains about crime and insecurity: ‘Long ago we had this extended family which was very helpful and I benefited from it. But now it has been eroded by [a] new culture. That is why in Kaunda’s time we did not have street kids but now we have more because of the demise of an extended family’.Footnote 131 Bobby Jackson Kabamba argues:
Today, problems are very bad. … Children of today, because of films and Western culture are very bad; they are not like we used to be when I was a child. Not so many people today have got money, only a few and the few who have got that money are not as helpful as it used to be in the past … Thereafter, these girls for example are turning to prostitution to make more money and the boys are using odd crooked means of making money.Footnote 132
Many agree that gender roles have changed, a belief that is commonly predicated on an inaccurate belief that women did not work in the past. Whether this change is for good or ill is, however, a matter of disagreement:
At the time, we felt like men, a father, because there was ease, there were fewer problems at home. It wasn’t until the 1990s that everything started to deteriorate. We had food provided by the employer … But today, this is no longer the case, you have to suffer to find food. … children in primary school studied for free, all my children went through there. Today, you have to pay … the father has difficulty meeting all the needs of his household, and I think that he cannot … call himself a father or a man.Footnote 133
For Justine Karumb however, the economic disaster that has befallen many Gécamines workers has unexpectedly positive effects:
When a person worked at Gécamines, he had a good salary. Some may not have been able to manage their wages to cope well with the crisis. Since at Gécamines there was schooling for the children of workers, health insurance, supplies, in addition to a good salary. And you could see how the workers used to drink … But since the crisis, they have mastered themselves to manage well. It was certainly the crisis that had changed their behaviour.Footnote 134
Conclusion
There is, then, no agreement about the meaning or significance of the ending of the corporatist ‘golden age’ of Copperbelt mining communities, apart from the fact that it has ended. Beyond a consensus that the region has experienced a devastating economic decline and profound social dislocation, respondents disagree about its specific timing, causation and impact on themselves and their communities. Their analysis is, unsurprisingly, affected by their own positionality, personal experience during and since the period of decline and their memory of that history, shaped by their communities and the ways in which this experience has been explained and mobilised by local elites. Residents sometimes highlight common themes in the history of decline both across the Copperbelt as a whole and within its two constituent parts. The enduring exploitation of the region’s resources and labour by outside forces is a primary trope in such explanations; those forces may be national political elites or foreign-owned mining companies, but the IFIs that played a major role in dictating macro-economic and company policies over twenty-five years are not today identified as a primary actor in this decline. These narratives are historically significant, not only because they help us understand the period of decline itself, but also because this lengthy period of stagnation, crisis and modest recovery is now as central to the Copperbelt’s historical experience as its better-known era of growth and prosperity. Adding it to the historical record then requires a similar attention both to the actual experience of historical decline and to how knowledge about it has been produced, by international and national elites, academics and members of the communities themselves, as this chapter has sought to do.
While interviewees can point out where in Mufulira or Likasi company-run leisure centres used to stand, or identify the health clinics that have now been turned into private bars or evangelical churches, younger Copperbelt residents have grown up in the absence of any such provision. In general, the shadow cast by the industry’s past is of little relevance or interest to the region’s young adults, for whom mine employment is little more than one potential pathway out of poverty, of no more significance than a career in accountancy or hairdressing. In one important respect, however, the Copperbelt’s extractive history remains ever present in the experiences and perceptions of its current (and likely future) communities, as the final chapter will explain.