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ZCTU National Labour Protest - Sept 13, 2006 - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
warns unions ahead of planned protests
Reuters
September 10, 2006
http://www.zwnews.com/issuefull.cfm?ArticleID=15109
Harare - Zimbabwe
authorities said on Sunday security agents were on high alert and
ready to crush planned
anti-government protests by the main labour union, which vowed
to press ahead this week with demonstrations. The Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) says it plans countrywide demonstrations
on Wednesday to protest against poor wages and workers' lack of
access to anti-retroviral drugs to fight HIV/AIDS, which kills an
estimated 3,000 people each week. This comes as Zimbabwe battles
its worst economic crisis in two decades of independence, marked
by years of foreign exchange, fuel and food shortages. "The various
arms of the State responsible for security are ready for them,"
Security Minister Didymus Mutasa was quoted as saying by the state-owned
Sunday Mail newspaper. "...They should not blame us because they
are provoking us as well as the country's wrath," added Mutasa.
But ZCTU secretary
general Wellington Chibebe vowed the protests would go ahead and
accused Mutasa of trying to intimidate workers. He said the labour
body had notified police around the country on the demonstrations,
contrary to comments by chief police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena
who told the Sunday Mail that the ZCTU had not sought permission
for the protests. "The protests are going ahead as announced and
this will be countrywide," Chibebe told Reuters. "Trade unions are
exempted from notifying the police when protesting but we did this
out of courtesy knowing how our government reacts," he added.
President Robert
Mugabe's government has kept opponents of his 26-year-old rule in
check through tough policing and security laws barring protests
without approval. ZCTU says workers need a minimum salary of about
Z$90,000 per average family per month and would want the government
to reduce income tax to 30 percent from 35 percent. Protracted wage
negotiations have so far failed, with employers insisting they cannot
afford the pay demands, as the majority of them already operate
below 30 percent of production. The ZCTU is an ally of the main
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which has threatened
similar nationwide protests at an unspecified date. Mugabe, 82,
denies responsibility for Zimbabwe's woes and says his local opponents
are being manipulated by Western powers he accuses of sabotaging
the economy as punishment for his seizure of white-owned farms for
blacks.
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