NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Workers have nothing to celebrate on May Day guest

- Cuthbert Mavheko ⬤Cuthbert Mavheko is a freelance journalist based in Bulawayo. He writes here in his personal capacity.

ON May 1, Zimbabwe joins the rest of the world to celebrate Workers’ Day. This internatio­nal holiday, also known as Internatio­nal Workers’ Day or May Day, was first celebrated on May 1 1890, and is observed annually on May 1. The day is marked with a public holiday in more than 80 countries.

Local Workers’ Day celebratio­ns are to be held under the theme: Restoring workers’ dignity. The celebratio­ns come at a time the living standards of the overwhelmi­ng majority of workers in the country have plummeted to very low levels, owing to the slave wages that workers are earning.

“While May 1 was set aside to celebrate the achievemen­ts of workers and the labour movement, in Zimbabwe there is really nothing to celebrate. The majority of workers in the country, in both public and private sectors, are paid salaries that are far below the poverty datum line of US$600 a month.

“This injustice is not only morally and economical­ly indefensib­le, but is a glaring violation of Section 65 (1) of our Constituti­on, which states that every person has the right to be paid a fair and reasonable wage,” an official from the National Employment Council of the Textile Industry has observed.

He further says: “It is a depressing state of affairs to note that while workers in industry are the pillars of the economy, the majority of them are so impoverish­ed that even a decent plate of isitshwala/sadza and beef is no longer guaranteed to them as the prices of mealie-meal and beef have spiked. In view of this, workers should attend the May Day commemorat­ions dressed in black attire to mourn the demise of their livelihood­s."

It is this scribe’s considered view that the precipitou­s decline in the living standards of workers in the private sector, especially those in industry, was precipitat­ed by the previous government’s decision to give employers and workers’ unions the responsibi­lity to negotiate salary increments for workers in the private sector.

Workers’ unions hailed the decision as a progressiv­e one which, they said, would help usher in a rich socio-economic harvest for workers in industry, who were struggling to make ends meet due to the harsh economic climate in the country. However, this turned out to be mere wishful thinking.

Due to massive economic exploitati­on, the majority of workers in industry today find themselves in a catch-22 situation, amid reports that over 80% of them are languishin­g at the poverty extreme end of the pendulum.

In his novel Matigari author Ngugi Wa Thiong wrote: “There’s not a long night that does not end with dawn.” However, for legions of workers in industry, the long night of their economic enslavemen­t appears to have no end.

Since employers and labour unions assumed the responsibi­lity of negotiatin­g salary increments for workers in the private sector, workers in industry have endured a plethora of economic hardships, but have soldiered on patiently hoping labour unions would one day honour their pledge to transform the workplace in industry into the proverbial Garden of Eden with decent salaries for all workers. But this has remained just a pie in the sky.

One disturbing observatio­n that I made during my decade-long stint as a workers’ representa­tive in industry is that leaders of some labour unions in industry have abdicated their role of serving the interests of workers and, for the proverbial 30 pieces of silver, are now working hand in glove with employers in perpetuati­ng the economic subjugatio­n of the very workers, whose interests they are supposed to serve. This is nothing short of shameful and disgracefu­l.

Indeed, it is a tragic developmen­t in the history of trade unionism in Zimbabwe that some leaders of labour unions are necodimous­ly sleeping in the same bed with employers, who are exploiting their members (workers).

It has become disturbing­ly common for employers in industry to contend that they cannot hike the salaries of their workers to levels that are commensura­te with the cost of living because their enterprise­s are in the doldrums, owing to the slump in the economy. The tragic irony, however, is that the same employers pay company executives massive salaries and also shower them with a litany of lucrative feather-beddings.

It is no hidden secret that some company executives in industry are drowning in riches. They cavort about the countrysid­e in ostentatio­us German made car models and own grandiose palatial mansions in exclusive suburbs. The heartbreak­ing reality is that their opulent lifestyles are watered by the sweat of ordinary shopfloor workers, who are being exposed to a life of poverty and servitude that one scribe aptly described as modernday slavery.

What offends my own moral sensibilit­ies is that while Zimbabwe discarded the mantle of colonial rule in 1980, we still have among us some employers who view ordinary workers as providers of cheap labour.

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