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The
economy has become the government's main opposition
IRIN News
February 07, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57554
HARARE - A wave
of strikes in Zimbabwe is making the threat of a "crippling" general
strike by the country's largest union federation largely academic,
as current industrial action or threats of more to come are already
bringing the scenario to pass.
The Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), which has often been in the
vanguard of protest against President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF government,
is taking a back seat, while a whole swathe of society, including
doctors, nurses, teachers, university lecturers and tobacco industry
workers have embarked on strike action, and miners, government employees
and students are on the brink of doing so.
Although previous
calls for general strikes by the ZCTU have largely gone unheeded,
the federation's president, Lovemore Matombo, has set a 23 February
deadline for government to improve working and living conditions,
or face industrial action. University students said they would boycott
lectures next week, but many are already not attending classes because
lecturers are on strike.
Wage negotiations
between miners and the Zimbabwe Chamber of Mines (ZCM) deadlocked
in late January, and Tinago Ruzive, chairman of the Associated Mine
Workers Union, said the union was now considering the way forward.
The mining industry is the country's second biggest employer after
the agricultural sector.
Ad hoc strikes,
such as a recent one-day walkout by employees of the Zimbabwe Electricity
Supply Authority (ZESA) for better pay, are an illustration of the
high levels of dissatisfaction among the national workforce as a
consequence of the world's highest inflation level, now at 1,281
percent.
While inflation
soars, wages remain static. According to the Consumer
Council of Zimbabwe's most recent report on the monthly budget
of the average low-income urban earner, the cost of living has increased
two-fold in a month. In January the council put the required budget
for a family of six at US$92, up from the previous month's requirement
of US$49.
In recent years,
the formal economy has shrunk by 65 percent, agricultural production
has declined by 50 percent, unemployment has been running at nearly
80 percent and shortages of food, fuel, electricity, medicines and
foreign currency have become commonplace.
"The strike
by ZESA, tobacco workers, medical practitioners and teachers is
for a worthy cause," Matombo said. "With the average minimum wage
currently pegged at Z$90,000 (US$18 at the parallel market rate*)
and an average family needing Z$459,000 (US$92) to meet basic monthly
requirements, and inflation at more than 1,200 percent per month,
the nation must brace itself for more serious strikes as workers
fail to make ends meet."
Although the
ZCTU, an ally of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
party, has been a fervent critic of Mugabe, disillusionment with
the ZANU-PF government's handling of the economy is spreading among
government employees.
Edmore Tichareva,
executive secretary of the Public Service Association (PSA), commented
that "The PSA, having noted with great concern that the salaries
that were awarded civil servants in January 2007 had been eroded
by inflation long before they were earned, has resolved to engage
the government with a view to have this matter addressed."
The association
has not ruled out the possibility of strike action. "In the meantime,
the provincial structures of the PSA have been requested to hold
meetings with members to plan for the way forward in the event that
we do not get the relief we are seeking," Tichareva said.
Tendai Chikowore,
president of the Zimbabwe Teachers' Association, (ZIMTA) said the
association's members were becoming worn down by the government's
failure to put inflation in check and were "being short-changed,
and thus heavily paying for their understanding, patience and resilience."
ZIMTA is widely regarded as a pro-government body.
"Although teachers
were awarded an increment in salaries and allowances with effect
from January 2007, failure by the government to bring down inflation
and stabilise prices of goods and services has rendered these increments
a non-event. Low remuneration has further reduced the status and
image of teachers, who cannot afford to buy decent clothing in order
to conform to the professional dress code," he said.
The secretary-general
of the Progressive
Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), Raymond Majongwe, told IRIN
that his members had been on strike since the beginning of 2007
and were demanding a monthly salary of Z$650,000 (US$130) instead
of their current salary of Z$150,000 (US$30). He said about 5,000
teachers were leaving the country annually to seek employment elsewhere.
"Our members
are going to school but are not teaching. We demand that all children
of teachers should also be exempted from paying school fees as a
benefit similar to that offered to war veterans."
War veterans
were the catalyst for Mugabe's fast-track land reform programme,
launched in 2000, which saw white farmland redistributed to landless
blacks, an event widely seen as the departure point for the country's
economic meltdown after the government failed to provide agricultural
inputs to the new farmers.
Promise Mkhwananzi,
president of the Zimbabwe
National Students' Union, (ZINASU) said students were preparing
for strike action because the tuition fees of Z$560,000 (US$112)
a semester had become unaffordable. "ZINASU shall embark on an indefinite
lecture boycott from February 14 if the government fails to address
our plight."
A faction of
the divided MDC opposition party, led by Prof Arthur Mutambara,
was planning street protests over the "untold hardships" of ordinary
Zimbabweans. "The 'No' campaign is about demanding, mobilising,
organising and collectively engaging in resistance for the restoration
of democracy, political freedoms and our dignity as a people," he
said.
Mugabe's former
spindoctor, Jonathan Moyo, recently dismissed the MDC as an ineffective
agent of change and said the real opposition to government in Zimbabwe
had become the economy and the race to succeed Mugabe as president.
"If there is
one unified truth among otherwise divided Zimbabweans, a truth now
also ringing true within key governmental and nongovernmental centres
of regional, continental and international opinion, it is that the
country's seven-year-old economic recession will worsen ... unless
and until there is a far-reaching political settlement of the five-year-old
Zimbabwean leadership question."
Mugabe assumed
the presidency in 1980, when the country achieved independence from
Britain, and was expected to step down in 2008, but is proposing
to stay in office until 2010.
"If Mugabe has
become so self-serving that he cannot do what everyone can see is
the right thing, or if his security men have become so irresponsible
that they want him to remain as their hostage while the country
is bleeding, then the people of Zimbabwe, including those in ZANU-PF,
should do the right thing by rising up to the challenge to save
the country," Moyo said. "There is just no other option. Otherwise,
chaos is looming."
* Official
exchange rate Z$250 to US$1
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