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1,000
WOZA and MOZA members hand over yellow cards to ZESA in Bulawayo
today
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
April 12, 2010
At noon today, 12th April
2010, approximately 1,000 members of Women and Men of Zimbabwe Arise
marched to the offices of the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority
(ZESA) offices in Bulawayo. Their aim was to deliver yellow cards
to the electricity service provider for poor service and high tariffs.
No arrests have been reported to date.
Four simultaneous protests
converged on the Lobengula Street offices but officials quickly
closed the gates and locked the doors, refusing to come out to receive
the 'yellow card'. The peaceful protests were mobilised after members
decided they needed to put direct pressure on ZESA to provide a
more efficient service and fair and affordable billing system.
The issue of ZESA needing
a telling-off seemed to have wide support and both vendors and bystanders
joined in the protest. The protestors sang a popular song: ZESA
- into oyenzayo siyizonda (ZESA we hate this thing you are doing).
Police officers who responded on foot and by vehicle were heard
to support the protest through direct comments to WOZA members.
One police officer said to a member, "you are back from telling
ZESA off? Well done keep it up."
As the peaceful group
tried to persuade ZESA officials to come out and received the yellow
cards, business activities in the ZESA building and at the police
headquarters opposite came to a halt, with staff seen peering over
the walls and out of windows supporting the protest. A ZESA employee
was overheard saying, "maybe we will get paid on time now because
of this pressure."
WOZA leaders knocked
at the door to the offices for over 15 minutes trying to get the
ZESA officials to come and receive the 'yellow cards'. People dressed
up as 'bosses' were seen converging at the reception giving instructions
to the receptionist and also trying to call on their mobile phones.
They refused to come to the door to receive the 'yellow cards',
but once these were posted under the door, they quickly came to
collect them. The thousand-strong procession then dispersed, walking
calmly past the police vehicle, which was parking to monitor the
protest. 11 police officers just stood and watched. After the crowd
had dispersed a ZESA employee came out and started to kick the placards
onto the street but a police officer told him to stop and pick them
up nicely. The same vehicle was then seen driving around town for
30 minutes monitoring the dispersing of members, including the tailing
of WOZA leaders, Williams and Mahlangu.
The 'yellow card' for
ZESA comes with a warning to shape up their service during the month
of May or face a ZERO service ZERO bill boycott of payments from
1st June 2010. Members using fixed meters advised ZESA that the
current service only deserved a US$5 payment rather than the current
level of payment calculated for a full service.
Along with the warning
members are only willing to pay US$15 for 24 hours 7 days a week
service. Consumers are aware of an ongoing consultative process
to look at tariffs. This process is at the public hearing stage
hosted by the parliament appointed Competition and Tariff Commission.
The card serves as a months notice to shape up or face 'suspension'.
WOZA is a community based
social movement of 70,000 members countrywide and as such have capacity
to mobilise a boycott.
Visit
the WOZA fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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