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Trade
unions join forces to boycott Zimbabwe goods
Tom
Burgis, Financial Times
August 13, 2008
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f5be03a0-68ce-11dd-a4e5-0000779fd18c.html?nclick_check=1
Trade unions
in Zimbabwe's neighbouring countries have agreed to ratchet up the
pressure on Robert Mugabe's regime by staging a one-week boycott
of all goods bound for the poverty-stricken country.
Zimbabwe's economy
is already on the brink of -collapse, with inflation thought to
be well above the official rate of 2.2m per cent.
But in a sign
of its growing influence at home and abroad, Cosatu, South Africa's
labour federation, said yesterday that it and its allies in the
region planned to refuse to handle imports heading for Zimbabwe
at the end of this month.
"It will
affect the ordinary people, no doubt about it," said Zwelinzima
Vavi, Cosatu's secretary-general, after a meeting in Johannesburg
with his counterparts from Zimbabwe and Swaziland.
"[Mr Mugabe]
is illegitimate. He is a dictator . . . He is already crumbling.
He is on his knees . . . We hope that this last push from civil
society will help deliver the demands of the people for democracy
and development," he said.
Cosatu's criticism
of the Harare regime have put it at odds with the African National
Congress, despite both being members of South Africa's ruling alliance.
The attempts of Thabo Mbeki, the South African president, to broker
a Zimbabwe deal through "quiet diplomacy" have drawn international
opprobrium.
The boycott,
which will also target shipments to Swaziland, is scheduled for
the week up to -September 3.
The unions are
demanding that Mr Mugabe relinquish power to a transitional authority
to oversee fresh elections following the president's widely criticised
victory in the June polls.
Mr Mugabe was
locked in a third day of -faltering talks yesterday aimed at brokering
a power-sharing deal with Morgan Tsvangirai, the opposition leader
who triumphed in March's first- round presidential vote before withdrawing
from the race as violence against his supporters escalated.
Cosatu hopes
to persuade unions in the other countries surrounding landlocked
Zimbabwe to participate. The federation's members include customs
workers, lorry drivers and airport staff.
Half of Zimbabwe's
imports come from South Africa. Of total imports, food accounts
for 15 per cent, fuel and chemicals for 20 per cent each, and vehicles
and machinery for 21 per cent.
Mr Vavi said
the initial one-week boycott could be followed by a fortnight-long
stoppage.
*Additional
reporting by Tony Hawkins in Harare
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