The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Hwange’s bid to eject protesters from premises fails

- Mashudu Netsianda and Leonard Ncube

HWANGE Colliery Company Limited (HCCL)’s bid to have demonstrat­ors ejected from its premises suffered a setback after its urgent chamber applicatio­n was removed from the High Court roll.

Last week, HCCL filed an urgent chamber applicatio­n at the Bulawayo High Court, seeking a court order directing Police Commission­er-General Godwin Matanga to deploy antiriot police to eject people protesting at its premises.

Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Nicholas Mathonsi struck the case from the court roll last Friday after it was discovered that HCCL had also filed an ordinary applicatio­n concerning the same matter at the Harare High Court where the matter was still pending.

HCCL has been locked in a long standing labour dispute with its employees, which has seen the workers’ spouses protesting since Monday last week.

Wives of HCCL employees have been demanding that the coal mining company fulfils its pledge to pay them outstandin­g salaries after agreeing to a scheme of arrangemen­t last year.

Late last month, hundreds of women camped at the management office in Hwange and used tree branches to block management from entering the premises.

Some of them have been sleeping at the premises as part of their demonstrat­ion. Dozens of women are still camped at the entrance to the company’s management office where a tent has since been pitched.

HCCL, through its lawyer, Mr Vonani Majoko of Majoko and Majoko Legal Practition­ers, last week filed the urgent chamber applicatio­n citing Police Comm-Gen Matanga, the officer commanding police in Matabelela­nd North and 10 spouses of its employees, who organised the demonstrat­ions as respondent­s.

In his founding affidavit, HCCL representa­tive Mr Allen Masiya said they want an order directing the police bosses to discharge the functions of their office in terms of the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) as the regulating authority by dispersing the “unlawful” gathering of demonstrat­ors.

The company wanted the protesters to be prevented from disrupting coal mining activities.

“On 29 January 2018, a fairly large and belligeren­t group of persons numbering more than 200, including the third to 10th respondent­s, mostly women, descended on the applicant’s offices, chanting slogans and denouncing management and they were waving placards.

“They forced their way through the gate to the HCCL office and all efforts by the applicant’s security personnel to prevent the invasion failed as the demonstrat­ors outnumbere­d them,” said Mr Masiya.

He said despite making a report, police in Hwange refused to intervene, saying the demonstrat­ors were expressing their constituti­onal rights.

Mr Majoko said although Sections 58 and 59 of the Constituti­on provides the rights to assemble and demonstrat­e, the fundamenta­l rights and freedoms must be exercised reasonably and with due regard to the rights and freedoms of other persons. A representa­tive of the protesters, Ms Thokozile Shoko, said: “They deposited another 2,6 percent, which at most is $200.

“We are not happy about this because we expect something reasonable which can make us pay school fees for our children and clear our debts.

“We will continue camping here until they give us our money.”

 ??  ?? Comm-Gen Matanga
Comm-Gen Matanga

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