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More govt workers join strike over poor pay
IRIN News
January 23, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57164
HARARE - More
disgruntled Zimbabwean government employees have joined striking
doctors and nurses to demand higher salaries as the economy continues
to crumble.
Lecturers at
the country's eight state-owned educational institutions have become
the third group of employees - after doctors and power utility workers
- to take industrial action this year. Government awarded civil
servants across the board a 300 percent salary increase last week,
but this was rejected as too low.
Bernard Njekeya,
a spokesman for the Zimbabwe State Universities Union of Academics
Association, told IRIN that the lecturers would be on a go-slow
until the end of a two-week period given to the government to address
their grievances.
"If the
period expires and no meaningful adjustments have been done, we
will go on a full-blown strike, and no doubt this will be very detrimental
to the educational sector; it is students who will suffer more,
and government is the only party that can avert this. We need a
pay rise that takes into account the worsening hyperinflationary
environment that has caused massive price hikes of essentials,"
he said.
The educators
want their salaries adjusted to match the rate of inflation, now
estimated at more than 1,200 percent annually. Junior lecturers
earn about US$480 (at the official foreign exchange rate), while
those holding senior lectureships get around US$740, way below the
US$1,406 a month the Zimbabwe
Consumer Council says it costs a family of six to subsist.
As spiralling
prices take basic household items further beyond the reach or ordinary
Zimbabweans, more employees have placed their demands before the
government. Last week, the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe, which represents the bulk of the
country's secondary and primary school teachers, gave the authorities
30 days to raise their monthly pay from US$240 to almost US$12,000.
Student unions at tertiary institutions have also warned of protests
over increased tuition fees.
The strike by
doctors and nurses, now more a month old, has left dozens of desperate
patients without medical care in rural and urban areas. The doctors,
who earn less than US$240 a month, opened the gate to what has become
a growing torrent of wage protests by demanding an 8,000 percent
increase to cushion themselves against inflation, and high transport
and food costs.
Government employees
in the security sector, including police and soldiers, who get an
average of about US$280 a month, are also reported to be unhappy.
They are not allowed to go on strike, but top security officials
have warned that if the government does not raise their salaries
and improve conditions of service, their personnel may end up joining
opposition forces to remove the ruling ZANU-PF party from power.
The state-owned
Standard newspaper reported on Sunday that many soldiers had left
the Zimbabwe National Army over poor pay to take up posts as security
guards or restaurant waiters in neighbouring South Africa and Botswana.
Police spokesman
Wayne Bvudzijena said more than 10,000 police officers had tendered
their resignations last year, while a High Court judge last week
urged government to increase the salaries of employees in the justice
delivery system, saying low wages had already forced many to seek
employment in other countries.
Analysts have
warned that Zimbabwe may experience more work boycotts and street
protests as hardship escalates, aimed against a government accused
by many of ruining the once vibrant economy.
"What we
are seeing this year is a situation whereby government workers are
fed up with their employer and are determined to show by way of
job boycotts that they need better salaries," said Felix Mafa,
president of the Post
Independence Survivors Trust, a nongovernmental organisation
(NGO) based in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second largest city. The NGO
advocates for justice for the victims of the Gukurahundi operation
conducted between 1982 and 1987 against PF-ZAPU, which drew most
of its support from the Ndebele people in southwestern Zimbabwe,
and Mugabe's ZANU, whose cadres were mainly drawn from the majority
Shona people in the north.
"It is
public knowledge that the security forces are also disenchanted
because of poor working conditions and low wages," Mafa said.
"If the situation continues like this, we are likely to plunge
into serious turmoil, as everyone becomes against the ruling authorities."
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