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Walking
for survival
IRIN News
January 22, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76369
It is 4 a.m. and still
dark in the low-income suburb of Kuwadzana, about 10km outside the
central business district (CBD) of Zimbabwe's capital, Harare.
There has been no electricity in Kuwadzana for around two weeks.
Bobbing beams of light
from the flashlights of some 20 men and women are the only source
of light in the inky blackness. They stop near the local shopping
centre, where they speak in whispers. Several members of the group
yawn loudly.
After 10 minutes they
move off in the direction of the city, but shrill whistles pierce
the quiet dawn, signalling that latecomers and other stragglers
are being left behind. There is a shout in the darkness and two
men and a woman join their colleagues. The group are all professionals
who can no longer afford the high transport fares in an economic
environment where earnings are wiped away by galloping inflation.
The government
has not publicly released official inflation figures for the last
two months but the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that the rate is now 100,000 percent
and still rising.
Granger Phiri, one of
the walkers, told IRIN that thousands of workers in Harare's low-income
and middle-density suburbs had formed "walking clubs"
because they could no longer afford the cost of public transport.
As they near the city centre, the group merges with other walking
clubs.
"I have been a member
of the local walking club for the past seven months, as all my earnings
would be depleted if I used public taxis for 15 days," said
Phiri, a junior official in the civil service in the CBD. He said
he earned Z$30 million a month (US$15 at the parallel market rate
of Z$2 million to US$1), but a single trip to town costs Z$1 million
(US$0.50).
Making
more money
Why
go through the agony of walking 20km every day just to earn US$15
a month? Phiri smiled and pointed to a bulging knapsack on his back.
"There is one thing that the human body cannot do without and
that is food. I sell plain bread sandwiches to my colleagues. I
also sell sliced tomatoes and cucumbers to colleagues who can afford
them, and that supplements my income."
The telephones at work
also come in handy: "I am now known as the person who can pass
messages to friends and relatives in the country and beyond our
borders through the government telephones which I use. Of course
that comes at a cost, which adds to my income."
Phiri said he was not
embarrassed at having to resort to unorthodox methods to earn a
living. "Everybody is selling something to somebody in order
to survive. Very little work is ever done. We have colleagues who
have turned to prostitution for survival, while others take annual
vacations in neighbouring countries such as Botswana, Mozambique
and South Africa to work as maids or farm labourers."
He said South Africa
was the destination of choice for most civil servants, because an
arrangement between the two governments meant they were not restricted
by stringent visa requirements. "All that is required is a
current payslip and a passport, and that can enable you to work
for several days before returning."
Neglecting
workers could do more harm
Wellington Chibhebhe, secretary-general of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, (ZCTU), a labour federation, told
IRIN that companies and the civil service were losing a lot of production
time because workers were too tired to work.
According to ZCTU research,
workers woke up as early as 3 a.m. to go to work and only got back
home at 11 p.m. "We are calling on employers to meet the full
monthly [transport] costs for the workers because this [walking
to work] creates a scenario whereby employees are subsidising the
operations of companies and the civil service."
Chibhebhe said employers
needed to relate salaries to the "poverty datum line"
of Z$200 million (US$200) a month, otherwise they could be exposing
themselves to the risk of theft. "What is obviously evident
is that there are scenarios that workers would steal from employers
or conduct private business using the employer's time and resources,
which has a serious negative impact on productivity."
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