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ZCTU National Labour Protest - Sept 13, 2006 - Index of articles
Zimbabwe
police break protest march
Stella Mapenzauswa, Reuters
September
13, 2006
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?
HARARE (Reuters) - Police swiftly quashed a labour union protest
in Zimbabwe's capital on Wednesday, seizing at least 15 demonstrators
and chasing others through the streets in a show of force by President
Robert Mugabe's government.
Officers in riot
helmets and equipped with batons and teargas canisters swooped on
Harare's central business district and grabbed some 15 protesters,
including top leaders of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), witnesses said.
"We have been
arrested. There are about 15 of us. We are now at Matapi police
station," ZCTU President Lovemore Matombo told Reuters by mobile
telephone, adding that ZCTU Secretary General Wellington Chibebe
had also been arrested.
Matombo said he
believed there had been more arrests, but that he had no further
immediate information.
A heavy police
presence kept onlookers well away from the protest march, which
the ZCTU said was aimed at highlighting poor wages, high taxes and
lack of access to anti-retroviral drugs to fight HIV/AIDS.
Earlier, a number
of youths loyal to Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF and used to intimidate
workers in previous protests could be seen on the main road to parliament,
while police barred motorists from driving through the area.
The ZCTU called
demonstrations in urban centres, but scaled them down to 2-hour
marches from an earlier proposed one-day national strike over fears
that expectations of a heavy state reaction might keep workers at
home.
Unions say workers
have borne the brunt of a deepening economic crisis widely blamed
on Mugabe's government and manifested in chronic shortages of food,
fuel, foreign currency and triple digit inflation.
The main opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which has its roots in the
ZCTU and is the biggest challenge to Mugabe's 26-year rule, urged
workers to come out in large numbers for the march and the security
forces to show restraint.
Two weeks ago
Tsvangirai and his top lieutenants marched to parliament to press
demands for a new constitution to replace one viewed as entrenching
Mugabe's rule, and to call for laws that provide for "free and fair"
elections.
A rival labour
federation aligned to Mugabe's ZANU-PF urged workers to boycott
Wednesday's demonstration, echoing government charges that the ZCTU
was using it as "a smokescreen" to pursue an opposition political
agenda.
"The real agenda
is ... meant to further the MDC cause for regime change," the group
said in a statement.
Mugabe's government
has said while worker demands were reasonable, the protests were
unnecessary because unions could discuss their issues under an existing
forum that groups representatives of government, industry and labour.
The ZCTU says the forum has proved a waste of time.
Mugabe, in power
since independence from Britain in 1980, denies responsibility for
Zimbabwe's economic woes. He dismisses his local opponents as puppets
of Western countries he says are determined to bring down his government
over its seizure of white owned commercial farms for blacks.
(Additional reporting
by Macdonald Dzirutwe)
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