24 May 2012
 
New Zimbabwe Header
Zuma painting difficult to ban: judge
Zambian held over 22 jumbo tusks
'Gay world' against nature: Mugabe
Cyanide killers get death penalty
MORE NEWS
Gono bans Zimplats from local banks
RioZim targets Murowa Diamonds takeover
MORE BUSINESS
Video: Decibel drops Dancehall Style
'Unpatriotic' Roki gets axe warning
MORE SHOWBIZ
Kutsanzira double spurs on CAPS
Hoffenheim loan out Musona
MORE SPORTS
Why Zuma's Spear should stay up
Zuma painting an attack on blacks
MORE OPINION
 
Facebook: reward for innovation
MORE COLUMNISTS
 
Unions to appeal to Mugabe, Tsvangirai
31/01/2012 00:00:00
by AFP
 
Deadlock ... Tendai Chikowore
 
RELATED STORIES
Nurses reject 22.5 percent pay hike
Matibenga attacks ‘rogue unionists’
Civil servants resume strike
Civil servants reject government pay offer
Matibenga defends handling of strike
Civil servants suspend strike
Govt announces deal for striking workers
Zanu PF, MDC-T trade blame over strike
Civil service strike off to slow start
Govt workers plan five-day strike
Civil servants call one-day strike

PUBLIC servants' unions in Zimbabwe said Tuesday they would ask leaders of the country's power-sharing government to intervene in their ongoing strike to double basic wages.

Tendai Chikowore, spokeswoman for the "apex council" comprising leaders from four government workers' unions, told journalists that officials came to the bargaining table Tuesday with the same $240-million blanket offer unions already rejected six days ago.

"The resource envelope availed by the government totalling $240 million, which was tabled last week and presented again today, is inadequate and therefore rejected," she said.

"This effectively means basic salary will not rise, hence our basis for no settlement on the package. Apex council will urgently appeal to the principals of the government of the national unity."

Zimbabwe's economy has begun recovering after a decade-long downturn, following a power-sharing agreement by long-time rivals President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai in the wake of failed 2008 polls.

Government workers staged a stay-away protest last week demanding a $538 minimum monthly salary, up from their current $200.

The government's offer, if spread among the 230,000 state employees, would give each worker just an $87-a-month increase.

Civil servants, particularly teachers, nurses and doctors, have been striking on and off for better pay since 2007.

The crisis peaked in 2008, when staff shortages forced state hospitals to close some units and teacher strikes left just 50 days of classes in the whole year.



Advertisement


 
Email this to a friend Printable Version Discuss This Story
 
Share this article:

Digg it

Del.icio.us

Reddit

Newsvine

Nowpublic

Stumbleupon

Face Book

Myspace

Fark
 
 
 
 
 
RSS NewsTicker