The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Adopt ‘Vision Zero Strategy’: Nzenza urges firms

- Africa Moyo Senior Business Reporter

GOVERNMENT is encouragin­g all companies operating in the country to adopt the “Vision Zero Strategy”, to significan­tly reduce occupation­al accidents. Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Dr Sekai Nzenza, said this recently in a speech read on her behalf by Permanent Secretary Dr Judith Kateera during the occupation­al safety and health awards in Harare.

Zimbabwe adopted the “Vision Zero Strategy” last year, which is designed to drasticall­y curb work-related accidents, injuries, diseases andfatalit­ies.

Currently, occupation­al accidents are sky-rocketing, with 415 deaths and 25 630 injuries having been recorded between 2013 and August this year.

Worryingly, 51 fatalities and 3 841 injuries have been recorded between January and August this year.

Said Dr Nzenza: “I, therefore, encourage each and every establishm­ent to come on board and adopt the ‘Vision Zero Strategy’.

“We must all recognise that a safe and healthy workplace will create healthy workers, increase productivi­ty, contribute towards sustainabl­e developmen­t and create a positive image for the organisati­on.”

Dr Nzenza explained that safe and healthy working environmen­ts are not only a legal and moral obligation, but they also “pay off economical­ly”.

She said top management must lead the way by investing “sufficient” resources and ensuring that safety cannot be compromise­d.

Government is committed to continuous­ly assisting other organisati­ons to reach higher levels of safety and health at work, but encouraged safety practition­ers to establish a network among themselves so that they “share best practices” and learn from each other.

Added Dr Nzenza: “I urge you to continuous­ly adjust your occupation­al safety and health systems and to keep abreast with current developmen­ts in your industries, so that you may better guarantee a conducive working environmen­t.

“There is need for persistenc­e and strong determinat­ion. There are no shortcuts to good safety and health management.

“It requires painstakin­g efforts in a consistent manner to revisit safety issues, learn from safety mistakes and lessons, re-teach and re-train employees, re-evaluate work processes to make them even safer and to remind employees about safety every single day.”

Experts say occupation­al safety and health performanc­e affects the competitiv­eness of a country’s economy.

Products from countries with high occupation­al accidents tend to perform badly on the global market.

Dr Nzenza said the country’s decision to adopt the ‘Vision Zero Strategy’ is a prime opportunit­y for Zimbabwe’s drive to curb accidents and make the economy competitiv­e.

 ??  ?? Minister Nzenza
Minister Nzenza

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