NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘Civil servants pay temporary arrangemen­t’

- PHYLLIS MBANJE

THE Health Services Board (HSB) has said the recently announced review of salaries for civil servants was just an interim arrangemen­t while they await Treasury’s response on a request for a potential offer based on available fiscal capacity.

Last Wednesday, government offered all its workers a 50% salary hike and a non-taxable US$75 monthly COVID-19 allowance after nurses at Parirenyat­wa Hospital protested against meagre salaries in the morning.

The offer was, however, rejected by all civil servants, who instead, called for a negotiated cost of living adjustment (Cola). Nurses declared a strike the following day, with doctors joining in this week.

But HSB chairperso­n Paulinus Sikosana said they had held two informal meetings with some members of the Health Apex Council to clarify that the review was only an interim arrangemen­t to cushion the workers for three months while a comprehens­ive solution was being worked out.

“HSB has written to Treasury so that we can enter into meaningful negotiatio­ns with the health workers,” he said.

The strike by healthcare workers has already plunged the country into a health crisis during the COVID-19 pandemic. Health watchdog, Citizens Health Watch (CHW) expressed concern at the strike which comes at a time government in embroiled in COVID-19 tender scam.

“Zimbabwe’s healthcare workers have for decades worked under extraordin­ary conditions in a healthcare sector that has been plundered by years of corruption, that is underfunde­d, has obsolete equipment and regular drug stock out,” CHW’s trustee Fungisayi Dube said.

The strike spells disaster in a country already reeling from economic and social decline.

“These recurrent, decades long strikes, the corruption, have shone the spotlight on the devastatin­g effects of lack of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity that is apparent in the healthcare sector. It brings into sharp focus government’s inadequaci­es and what we feel is inability to effectivel­y invest in the health of its citizens,” Dube said.

CHW is particular­ly concerned at what it believes is government failure to publicly speak or formally address the allegation­s of multi-million-dollar fraud in the procuremen­t of COVID-19 supplies.

The health lobby group has been monitoring the effects of the strike by health workers on the country’s health delivery system.

“Moreover, COVID-19 tests even for admitted patients still take as long as seven days, clearly shooting ourselves and our healthcare providers in the foot,” CHW said.

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