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COSATU
gears up for border blockade
Zim-Online
February 25, 2005
http://www.zimonline.co.za/headdetail.asp?ID=9133
PRETORIA - The Congress
of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) will on March 16 blockade
Zimbabwe's lifeline Beitbridge border post with South Africa to
protest repression, worker and human rights violations by President
Robert Mugabe and his government.
COSATU secretary general
Zwelinzima Vavi told a South African civic society solidarity meeting
on Zimbabwe here that the union will also stage protest marches
at Beitbridge and hold an all-night vigil at the border post on
March 30 - a day before Zimbabwe's crucial general election - to
highlight the lack of democracy in that country.
"COSATU will implement
a series of protests including a march in Pretoria (on March 9)
a picket at Beitbridge (on 16 March), two marches at the border
and a night vigil (on March 30)," Vavi told the meeting.
He added: "Is there
a blockade, well what is the difference to a march? For the duration
of the march, the road will effectively be blockaded."
blockade of Beitbridge
even for a few hours will have a devastating impact on Zimbabwe
which heavily relies on South Africa, its biggest trading partner,
for essential supplies including fuel and food.
Other countries north
of Zimbabwe such as Zambia and Malawi will also be hit hard as they
route the bulk of their imports through Beitbridge, which is Africa's
busiest border post.
South African Foreign
Affairs Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who two weeks ago warned COSATU
that Pretoria would not allow disruptions at Beitbridge, could not
be reached for comment last night.
But Vavi appeared unperturbed
by Dlamini-Zuma's warnings, instead calling on South Africans to
abandon their blind loyalty to and admiration of Mugabe and his
ruling ZANU PF party and stand up to repression in Zimbabwe.
He said: "Civic
society in South Africa must unashamedly act in solidarity with
their counterparts in Zimbabwe. If we close our eyes to the realities
of repression, there is a danger we would ignore other future abuses."
Mugabe has reversed the
gains of Zimbabwe's bitter 1970s liberation struggle with "massive
human rights abuses" now routine in that country, Vavi said.
Under the current repressive
environment, it would take "a miracle" for Zimbabwe's
March 31 election to be free and fair, the firebrand trade unionist
said.
Vavi called on Southern
Africa Development Community (SADC) observers to be immediately
deployed to Zimbabwe saying the regional observers would not be
able to play an effective role if sent only a few days before the
poll.
SADC is ready to send
observers to Zimbabwe but is unable to do so because Harare is yet
to formally invite the regional organisation to send its team.
The two-day civic society
solidarity meeting which ends today was organised by the Zimbabwe
Solidarity and Consultative Forum.
Zimbabwe's main opposition
Movement for Democratic Change party leader Morgan Tsvangirai is
scheduled to address the meeting today.
Meanwhile, COSATU president
Willie Madisha told a separate Solidarity trade union congress that
there were gross violations of workers' rights in Zimbabwe and claimed
that there were incidents where some workers there had even been
castrated.
"Workers are beaten,
maimed and killed. We know of instances where workers have been
castrated," Madisha told the congress.
The COSATU president
also lamented the plight of hundreds of thousands of former farm
workers left jobless and destitute when Mugabe seized farms from
white farmers.
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