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SOUTH
AFRICA: COSATU mission to Zimbabwe on, say labour leaders
IRIN News
January 24, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=45201
Johannesburg
- The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) remains firm
in its intention to send a new fact-finding mission to Zimbabwe,
despite official warnings that such a delegation would not be welcome.
Last week COSATU said
the situation in Zimbabwe was critical, as the present legal and
political situation was not conducive to holding free and fair elections,
due in March, and alleged that labour unions were being suppressed.
The country has one of
the highest inflation rates in the world, resulting in a steady
erosion of household purchasing power. New laws restricting freedom
of association and freedom of the press have also been heavily criticised.
A COSATU delegation was
deported from Zimbabwe in October last year, on allegations that
their mission was more political than labour-related. An application
for permission to send another fact-finding mission was turned down
last week.
In a joint communique
with Wellington Chibebe, secretary-general of the Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions (ZCTU), COSATU secretary-general Zwelinzima Vavi
said a delegation would be sent to Zimbabwe by the first week of
February, in a show of solidarity with workers in Zimbabwe.
"A delegation should
be sent to Zimbabwe, so that the unions of the two countries can
debate the trade union situation in Zimbabwe," Vavi explained.
Chibebe said workers
had been badly affected by worsening political, human rights and
economic crises; the ZCTU supported COSATU's decision to send another
fact-finding delegation to Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe's minister of
public service, labour and social welfare, Paul Mangwana, told IRIN
that COSATU would not be allowed to use union issues to cover a
mission meant to interfere in the internal affairs of the country.
"The nature of the COSATU mission is political," he claimed.
"South African labour
unions do not govern or influence labour issues in Zimbabwe. COSATU
wants to gain cheap mileage by traversing their activity boundaries
- they should limit their activities to South Africa. We have active
labour unions in Zimbabwe, and anyone who says they are not being
allowed to function is talking absolute nonsense," Mangwana
charged.
"As the responsible
minister, I can confirm that the labour situation in Zimbabwe is
normal. We are in contact with unions, and I have not received any
complaints from them. We are negotiating with them [and business],
including the same ZCTU that makes all these claims, in the Tri-partite
Negotiating Forum."
He added that the ZCTU
was free to have relations with regional and international unions,
as long as these relations were confined to labour issues.
Daniel Molokela, a Johannesburg-based
political analyst and coordinator of the NGO, Peace and Democracy
Project of Zimbabwe, said COSATU had every reason to be concerned
with the situation across South Africa's northern border, but thought
it unlikely that the Zimbabwean authorities would tolerate a second
COSATU delegation.
"I foresee a repeat
of the [October 2004] deportation affair if COSATU goes into Zimbabwe
without state permission. However, I do not see the need for a visiting
union to seek government clearance to visit a fellow union. The
government of Zimbabwe has always maintained that it has nothing
to hide, and anyone who wants to verify can visit and check. Denying
COSATU the right to verify the situation shows that there is a lot
that is still hidden right now," Molokela remarked.
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