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ZCTU
threatens action over Cosatu ban
Kumbirai Mafunda,
The Standard
October 31, 2004
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/read.php?st_id=880
THE government
and the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) could be headed
for a collision course over last week's expulsion of a delegation
of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) leaders who
were on a five-day fact finding mission.
On Tuesday last week the government deported a 12-member delegation
from Cosatu saying their mission was not acceptable because it was
"political". The Cosatu leaders had arrived in Zimbabwe the previous
day on a five-day fact-finding mission.
The ZCTU's supreme
decision-making body, the General Council met on Wednesday in the
capital to review Harare's highhanded action. ZCTU president Lovemore
Matombo said the emergency meeting of the General Council had mandated
the labour movement to register its protest in the wake of fresh
attacks on trade unionism.
"The General
Council is greatly harmed and angered by this uncalled for action
by the government. This suggests that workers of Zimbabwe and the
general population are quarantined in all aspects of political and
social life," Matombo said.
Officers from
the immigration department accompanied by members of the police
deported the Cosatu team on Tuesday, accusing it of meddling in
the country's affairs on behalf of former colonial ruler Britain,
a charge Cosatu vehemently denied.
Matombo did
not specify the course of action the labour movement would take.
"Any form of
protest now has to take a completely different form. The collision
course will continue," vowed Matombo in an interview last week.
The ZCTU has
on numerous occasions clashedwith the government over high taxation,
abuse of trade union leaders and the latter's failure to stem the
economic decay.
With a clash
looking increasingly likely between the government and the ZCTU,
other civic society organizations have thrown their weight behind
the labour movement.
"Cosatu was
kicked out because they wanted to meet the National Constitutional
Assembly (NCA). So when the ZCTU fights this stupid attitude of
the government we will be behind them," said NCA chairman Lovemore
Madhuku.
The deportation,
which has left Cosatu locked in an acrimonious struggle with the
leadership of the African National Congress (ANC), threatens the
latter's relations with the ruling Zanu PF government long considered
skeptical of ANC.
Cosatu spokesperson,
Patrick Craven declared the expulsion as a snub to the South African
government as well as Cosatu. Analysts said the uneasy relationship
between Zanu PF and the ANC could be tested by the Cosatu deportation.
During South
Africa's armed struggle, the Zimbabwe government supported the fast
fading Pan Africanist Congress which has performed dismally at subsequent
elections.
Meanwhile, Harare's
action continued to draw international condemnation with the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) vowing to protest to
the United Nations' International Labour Organisation (ILO) against
the treatment of Cosatu.
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