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ZIMBABWE:
Labour movement has little to celebrate on May Day
IRIN News
April
29, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46887
JOHANNESBURG
- The Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) remains the only
credible labour movement in the country, despite facing internal
strife and pressure from the government, economic and political
analysts told IRIN.
Over the past month the ZCTU leadership has been challenged by factions
in affiliated unions, who have accused them of misappropriating
money and awarding themselves hefty salary increases without union
approval.
As May Day approaches - the traditional commemoration of workers'
rights worldwide - the government has intensified its labelling
of the 300,000-member ZCTU as a political appendage of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), rather than a genuine labour
movement.
The ZCTU leadership alleges that the infighting has been stirred
by the government, but the dissension has raised questions over
the transparency of the movement, which in the late 1990s arose
as a powerful and critical voice of the ruling party's economic
policies.
Key figures in the MDC, including party leader Morgan Tsvangirai,
were senior ZCTU members, and the government has insisted that a
clear link remains.
Eddie Cross, an MDC economic advisor, said despite the country's
shrinking economy - where formal employment stands at just 20 percent
- the relevance of the ZCTU remained, and was reflected in its involvement
in national economic policy forums alongside the government and
business representatives.
"The ZCTU cannot be written off. Through affiliate unions it represents
the largest number of workers in the country and, as such, cannot
be ignored. Almost all employed Zimbabweans are members, and that
makes them an important constituency in national planning," said
Cross.
Despite the difficulty the ZCTU has faced in organising industrial
action to protest plummeting standards of living - the last stay-away
it called in 2004 led to the arrest of its leadership under public
order laws - ZCTU president Lovemore Matombo told IRIN the movement
was far from being a spent force.
"We admit that the ZCTU is facing a lot of pressure - government
is doing all it can to label us as pro-MDC politicians: it has used
pro-ZANU-PF unions within us to divide the movement, but that will
fail, as did other politically inspired unions like the ZFTU [Zimbabwe
Federation of Trade Unions]," said Matomo.
Underlining the fraught relations between government and the unions,
police arrested six ZCTU members under the Public Order and Security
Act in the eastern town of Mutare this week while the unionists
were planning their May Day celebrations, the ZCTU said in a statement.
"How does the government think it will address the economic crisis
by antagonising labour - they are just further jeopardising economic
growth," commented ZCTU general-secretary Wellington Chibebe.
Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Nicholas Goche
refused to comment on the continued role of the ZCTU in Zimbabwe,
or the arrest of the ZCTU officials.
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