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Rot
at Shabanie and Mashaba Mines has gone on for too long
Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU)
February 23, 2010
The Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions is concerned by the threat to more than
1 000 jobs and livelihoods of workers employed by Shabanie and Mashaba
mines. This comes against the backdrop of revelations that the mines
face collapse, a situation that is regrettable. The collapse of
these mines means thousands of lives have been affected in the towns
of Zvishavane and Mashava as even businesses that had set up there
had set up based on the existence of the mines. The towns run the
risk of turning into another Mhangura or Mvuma. After the closure
of Mhangura mine, the town became a ghost town and even up to now
people residing there stay in abject poverty. The same goes for
Mvuma, a once rich small mining establishment that now has nothing
to show for its once acclaimed status.
More worrying is the
emerging trend of the collapse of companies that have been placed
under administrators. It happened at David Whitehead and it is happening
now at Shabanie and Mashaba Mines. It is ironic that government
claims to have taken over the mines to save them from collapse yet
the fortunes of the mines have dipped since government took control
and placed the mines under an administrator, one Arafas Gwaradzimba.
Workers at the mines
claim there have been no current statistics to show how much production
has been going on at the mines or how much money has been realised
from the sales of asbestos. We are now inclined to believe there
are some political heavy weights who have an interest in the affairs
of the mines and have been gaining financially at the expense of
the workers.
After the shootings of
innocent striking workers in September 2009, the ZCTU called for
an immediate commission of inquiry not only into the shooting incident,
but also into the operations of the mines that had led workers to
go unpaid for more than nine months. There has been a deafening
silence from Parliament over the composition or constitution of
the Commission of Inquiry or whether it would start investigations
any time soon.
The ZCTU demands that
this Commission immediately be constituted to look into the running
of the mines and avert a potential loss of employment for thousands
of mine workers and negative effect on the dwellers of the two mining
towns.
Visit the ZCTU
fact sheet
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