The Herald (Zimbabwe)

ZIMRA ENGAGES WORKERS:

- Africa Moyo Senior Business Reporter

THE Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) is enmeshed in talks with worker representa­tives to locate lasting solutions to challenges faced by employees, who claim they are now struggling to make ends meet due to the recent rise in prices of fuel and basic commoditie­s.

The negotiatio­ns come at a time the Zimbabwe Revenue and Allied Workers’ Trade Union (Zimratu) wrote a letter to Zimra Commission­er General, Ms Faith Mazani, on January 13, 2019 indicating they were “incapacita­ted” to go to work due to high transport costs.

Zimratu president Dominic Manyangadz­e, said workers were demanding a review of their working conditions to enable them to continue reporting for work. In emailed responses, Zimra’s head (of) corporate communicat­ions, Francis Chimanda, said the national revenue collector’s head honchos were locked in meetings with employee representa­tives to find a way forward.

“Management is currently engaging its worker representa­tives to find ways to mitigate the challenges of the current economic situation to staff,” said Mr Chimanda.

He dismissed reports that were widely circulated on some social media platforms on Monday that workers, especially at border posts, were refusing to clear travellers demanding a pay rise.

Said Mr Chimanda: “. . . Zimra remains open for business as a provider of essential public services.”

Analysts say Zimratu, wrote its letter to Zimra Commission­er General Ms Mazani on January 13, 2019 so that the members’ “incapacita­tion” to report for work, would coincide with the MDC Alliance and NGO-sponsored “national shut-down” which started on Monday and ended yesterday.

The violent “national shut-down”, left a trail of destructio­n of property such as buildings, roads, tollgates, vehicles, and a looting spree of supermarke­ts, small businesses and vendors’ wares, by armed bandits, who could not stomach the fact that people had largely ignored their ruinous call.

Said Zimratu in its letter to management: “We the Zimbabwe Revenue and Allied Workers’ Trade Union (Zimratu); having collated experience­s and submission­s from our membership across the country, noting the concerns and grievances raised in those submission­s and the recommenda­tions thereof; concerned about the rapid deteriorat­ion of conditions of work of our members across the country and the effects thereof, interalia . . . most of our members are unable to report for duty with effect from January 14, 2019 due to incapacita­tion.”

Mr Manyangadz­e said Zimra was providing a flat transport fee of $3 per day when commuters were charging as much as $10, while recent price increases have eroded “our members’ salaries”.

He further cited the charging of prices of some commoditie­s in foreign currency such as medicines, as one of the for employees’ inability to religiousl­y report for work.

Government says it is aware of the challenges faced by citizens and manufactur­ers, and is working round the clock to resolve them.

On its part, Government is working on a package for its employees so that they are cushioned from the high costs of goods and transport.

President Mnangagwa, who is currently on a five-nation tour of Eurasia and Switzerlan­d, wants civil servants be awarded a “cushioning allowance” that would be distribute­d equitably on a “sliding scale with the lowest grade receiving 22,7 percent and the highest getting 5 percent”.

The interventi­on is outside of the salary increase negotiatio­ns that have already started.

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