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Cosatu
seeks to revisit Zim
The Daily
Mirror
January 14, 2005
http://www.dailymirror.co.zw/index.cfm?name=natnews&wh=main&sid=9747&ishudate=2005-01-14%2008:46:00.0&ishuid=331
Barely three
months after its delegation was kicked out of the country, the Congress
of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) has confronted the Zimbabwean
government again seeking permission to tour the southern African
nation on a fact-finding mission. Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions
(ZCTU) secretary general Wellington Chibebe, yesterday confirmed
receiving communication from Cosatu spelling out its plans to tour
the country. Chibebe was quick to point out that the union’s mission
had nothing to do with testing Zimbabwe’s political temperatures.
"It’s not that they want to come and assess the political situation
in the country, in fact it is a repeat of their earlier mission,"
he said. Chibebe, who was in South Africa last week, said the idea
to visit Zimbabwe was reached by Cosatu’s supreme decision-making
body, the congress. "They are fulfilling the congress’s decision,"
he said, adding that it was not yet known when the delegation would
visit the country.
The Minister
of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Paul Mangwana yesterday
confirmed receiving communication from Cosatu to that effect. Mangwana
said: "I received a letter from Cosatu. I am not at liberty to engage
in relations with entities of a foreign country directly. Cosatu
should know that if they want to engage the government of Zimbabwe
they have got to pass through their Labour Ministry in South Africa
and that ministry would then get in touch with my ministry either
directly or through the ministry of foreign affairs. That is how
countries relate and engage each other."Mangwana warned that if
the Cosatu delegation bulldozed its way into the country, it was
going to meet the same fate as in October last year. "I do not know
what they want in my country. I am having negotiations with ZCTU,
a union in my country and our relations with ZCTU have improved.
I am not interested in talking to them. They are a federation in
South Africa and they have no business to do in my country, except
through the bilateral-relations we have with the ministry of labour
– South Africa," Mangwana said.
He added: "They
are unwanted people. Unwanted people are thrown away. If they come
we will force them into the next Kombi." A Cosatu delegation was
bundled out of the country last year following protracted meetings
with government officials, including security agents and officials
from the Immigration Department after their visit was perceived
to be political rather than union business. Home Affairs Minister
Kembo Mohadi then said of the deportation: "Havana kudhipotwa, asi
kuti vaenda kumusha kwavo. Ndiani akanga avabvumidza kupinda munyika
muno? (They were not deported. They simply returned to their country.
Who had allowed them into the country, anyway?") Efforts to get
a comment from Cosatu were fruitless yesterday.
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