The Herald (Zimbabwe)

5 000 ex-Wenela workers seek pension payments

- Leonard Ncube in VICTORIA FALLS

ABOUT 5 000 former Wenela workers have registered with the Southern African Miners Associatio­n (Sama) seeking facilitati­on of their pension payments. The Zimbabwean unit of the associatio­n has started sending registered candidates for X-rays screening at the Kadoma Occupation­al Health Services Centre.

Wenela is an acronym Witwatersr­and Native Labour Associatio­n, comprising former South African mines workers drawn from Zimbabwe, Malawi, Botswana and Mozambique.

The former workers are being engaged for processing of their pensions and were told to under X-ray testing so that they get compensate­d if they contracted lung diseases such as silicosis during their period of employment.

Silicosis is a lung disease caused by breathing in tiny bits of silica, a mineral that is part of sand, rock, and mineral and mostly affects workers in occupation­s mining, glass manufactur­ing and foundry work.

Sama Zimbabwe representa­tive Mr Lungelwe Mkwananzi said out of the targeted 23 000 ex workers only 5,000 have registered.

He said the first batch of 44 former workers from Bulawayo have since been tested.

A doctor was designated to attend to them and Bulawayo is the first province to send people.

“We have sent three groups so far from Bulawayo for the Benefit Medical Examinatio­n. The idea is to send a group every week and all expenses including transport are paid for through the TB in Mines Programmes (TIMPs) funded by the World Bank and going there will be rotational by province,” he said.

Sama Zimbabwe has offices in Bulawayo, Gwanda, Kwekwe, Lupane, Victoria Falls, Chiredzi, Harare, Masvingo and Rusape, representi­ng their respective provinces.

The ex-workers are expected to register at their nearest offices giving all details including the mine they used to work for and nature of job.

They are being screened for any lung condition including TB, breathing problems, ear drums problems and anything linked to working undergroun­d.

“It’s now happening and we believe we are making a breakthrou­gh.

“The problem is that there is only one doctor. Currently we are doing checks to see how many have registered from provinces. Numbers have not really been coming from provinces but we are targeting 23,000 because we know there are there,” he said.

Mr Mkwananzi, however, said as an associatio­n they were worried about some people who seek to hijack the process in an effort to have a share of the benefits. Wenela closed in the early 1980s and thousands of locals who once worked there are poised to receive a windfall once pension talks are concluded.

Sama will also trace names of all ex-miners who died in the mines and facilitate their compensati­on and repatriati­on of benefits through formal channels. EU countries have also shown interest in facilitati­ng payment of claims as they acknowledg­e that Africa is poor as a result of exploitati­on.

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