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LABOUR officials were brutally assaulted by the police for organising street protests last September |
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By Hendricks Chizhanje HARARE - The Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) says it was forced to cancel May Day
celebrations in four provinces after militant supporters of President Robert
Mugabe’s ruling ZANU PF party allegedly threatened to murder union officials if
the celebrations went ahead. Relations between Mugabe
and the ZCTU are hostile with the workers’ federation blaming wrong government polices
for plunging the economy and workers into misery. In turn, Mugabe accuses the
ZCTU of conspiring with his Western enemies and of using genuine worker grievances
as pretext to instigate Zimbabweans to revolt and overthrow his government. ZCTU national organiser
Michael Kandukutu told ZimOnline that ZANU PF activists in the provinces of Mashonaland
East, West, Central and Masvingo – all strongholds of the ruling party– had
threatened to forcibly evict local union officials from their homes, assault or
murder them as punishment for organizing workers’ rallies. Kandukutu said: “We have
had problems with some ZANU PF supporters who have told our union officials in district
structures that they won’t allow the May Day celebrations to go ahead in their
areas. They (ZANU PF supporters) were telling them that they should terminate
their association with the ZCTU.” ZANU PF spokesman Nathan
Shamuyarira was not immediately available for comment on the matter. Workers rallies are
scheduled for Tuesday elsewhere across the country, with the main rally at
Harare’s Gwanzura soccer stadium. The ZCTU, which last
March called a two day national strike to pressure the government to meet
demands for better pay and living conditions for workers, is expected to use
the rallies to mobilise workers for more strikes. The union says it plans
to call national job boycotts after every three months and would not relent
unless the government urgently moves to end an economic crisis gripping the
country for the past eight years and which has seen inflation soaring to over 2
000 percent, rising poverty, unemployment and severe shortages of food. -
ZimOnline |