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ZBC
problems not insurmountable
Daily News
October 01, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/10/01/zbc-problems-not-insurmountable
The plight of
workers at State broadcaster, the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(ZBC) has been dire for some time. And the situation seems to be
getting worse.
Their salaries
are being paid in small advances of between $60 to $100, making
it well nigh impossible for employees to provide for their families.
To make matters
worse, their medical aid has been stopped.
Since their
case has gone for so long without remedy, the staff is appealing
to the heavens above for divine intervention - through spiritual
fasting.
Workers have
been sending each other mobile messages to start spiritual fasting
today for the next three days.
But officials
at the broadcaster seem totally unmoved.
A public relations
officer for the organisation said: “If they decide to seek
divine intervention, then let them do so, but at their own peril.”
How can appealing
for divine intervention constitute a peril?
It is inexcusable
that workers should be treated in this way and still be expected
to put in a good day’s work on empty stomachs, with hungry
children probably not going to school and landlords threatening
to evict them. That’s a tall order.
In March, a
parliamentary committee on Media, Information, and Communication
Technology said there was widespread disgruntlement among staff
and that this was compromising the quality of programming at the
broadcaster.
This has driven
the majority of audiences to watch satellite television.
At that time,
the workers had not been paid for two months.
Despite the
report, nothing seems to have been done to alleviate the workers’
predicament.
There is no
justification for the lethargy because top management is said to
be getting obscene salaries and hefty allowances.
Happyson Muchechetere
the organisation’s chief executive said then that ZBC had
imported new broadcasting equipment worth $6.5m from China under
a government-to-government deal.
The equipment
also included a new outside broadcasting van.
How can workers
be expected to operate such expensive equipment on empty stomachs?
In the past,
there have been cases at ZBC where workers paid themselves by using
the broadcaster’s equipment in desperation.
This should
not be allowed to happen.
The workers
are now pinning their hopes on new Media, Information and Broadcasting
Services minister Jonathan Moyo to save them.
We urge the
authorities to expeditiously tackle the problem as workers and families
are suffering unnecessarily.
The problem
is not insurmountable.
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