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ZIMBABWE:
Trade unionists remain behind bars
IRIN
News
November
09, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=50007
JOHANNESBURG
- The top leadership of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU)
were still in prison on Wednesday after being arrested ahead of
an anti-poverty march in the capital, Harare.
ZCTU president Lovemore Matombo, secretary-general Wellington Chibebe
and some 100 members were arrested on Tuesday as they were preparing
to take part in what the police deemed an illegal demonstration
to highlight growing unemployment and the rocketing cost of living.
Lucia Matibenga, a senior ZCTU official, told IRIN she was unable
to comment on the labour federation's next move, as it was "operating
in an uncertain terrain".
The ZCTU march followed protests at the weekend by the National
Constitutional Assembly (NCA), a pro-democracy civic alliance.
The official Herald newspaper on Wednesday described the series
of demonstrations as an attempt by the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), the NCA and the ZCTU to incite "people to go into
the streets to kick-start a Ukrainian-style 'Orange Revolution'".
Munyaradzi Bidi, executive director of the Zimbabwe Human Rights
Association, commented that against the backdrop of "an economic
meltdown, the government's decision to call for the election of
a senate on November 26 has angered the people - they feel they
have not been adequately consulted".
"People have also not recovered from the impact of Operation Murambatsvina,
in which flea markets were destroyed and thousands of people lost
employment in the informal sector," he pointed out.
A UN report estimated that Operation Murambatsvina - which the government
said was aimed at clearing slums and flushing out criminals - had
left more than 700,000 people homeless or without a livelihood after
it began in mid-May.
According to the Herald, the ZCTU unionists were charged with participating
in an illegal demonstration "or, alternatively, under the Miscellaneous
Offences Act for obstructing movement of traffic".
Zimbabwe is in the grip of a severe economic crisis and facing serious
food shortages due to recurring droughts and the government's fast-track
land redistribution programme, which disrupted agricultural production
and slashed export earnings.
The country has been described as having one of the fastest-shrinking
economies in the world, with unemployment at 80 percent.
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