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DIDYMUS Mutasa . . . vowed to sternly deal with labour leaders |
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By Hendricks Chizhanje HARARE - The Zimbabwe
government on Sunday said trade union leaders calling for a national work
boycott in April are itching “to start a war” in the country and vowed to
sternly deal with them. The Zimbabwe Congress of
Trade Unions (ZCTU), the largest umbrella union for workers in the country, at
the weekend said it was mobilising workers for a two-day nationwide job boycott in
the first week of April over the country’s fast deteriorating economic crisis
and worsening conditions for workers. The union - that has
slated its job stayaway for April 3 and 4 and says industrial action would
escalate as from April - had given President Robert Mugabe’s government up to
February 23 to begin implementing measures to stem an economic meltdown that
has made life in the once prosperous southern African nation unbearable. State Security Minister
Didymus Mutasa promised a tough response to any ZCTU-organised protests or work
stoppage. “They (ZCTU) want to
start a war and we are more than prepared to deal with them,” said Mutasa, who
is also in charge of the government’s chaotic land reforms and is a close confidante of Mugabe. Mutasa advised ZCTU
leaders to learn from previous attempts to organise anti-government protests
that have been ruthlessly crushed by soldiers and police, adding the union better heed warnings by the government over the
April strike. About 30 ZCTU leaders and
activists were last September severely assaulted and tortured by the police
after attempting to organise workers to march in Harare in protest against
worsening economic hardships and poverty. Many of the trade
unionists had to be hospitalised for several days to receive treatment for
severe injuries during the torture that was condemned by major Western
governments, local and international human rights groups. Police spokesman Wayne
Bvudzijena would not say whether the law enforcement agency would use the same
brutal tactics against the ZCTU in April but said the union could not organise
any public protest in Harare and surrounding areas where the police have banned
political meetings and protests for three months. The police imposed the
ban on public protests and meetings following last week’s running battles in
Harare’s Highfield working class suburb with supporters of the main opposition
Movement for Democratic Change party. Bvudzijena said: “The
police have issued a three-month ban on such activities so it would be illegal
for them (ZCTU) to organise protests.” ZCTU president Lovemore
Matombo was not immediately available on Sunday to comment on the government’s
threats to stop the April job boycott. Zimbabwe is on a
political knife-edge as a steep economic crisis takes its toll on a population
grappling with inflation of nearly 1600 percent, the highest in the world and
surging unemployment and poverty. The tensions have
worsened following proposals by Mugabe’s ZANU PF to extend his rule under an
election harmonisation plan, which will see a presidential election scheduled
next year coinciding with parliamentary polls in 2010. The opposition and civil
groups have condemned the move, saying Zimbabwe cannot afford to have Mugabe in
charge for an additional two years. They have threatened to roll out mass protests
to block the plan, while a large section within Mugabe’s own ruling ZANU PF party
is opposed to extending his tenure. - ZimOnline |