The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Looming showdown between teachers, Govt

- BY KUDAKWASHE TAGWIREYI

TEACHERS are headed for another showdown with the government following an announceme­nt that schools will open on February 7, with unions representi­ng the educators saying they will not report for duty until their welfare issues are addressed.

Acting Health and Child Care minister Amon Murwira said schools would now open as he announced new relaxed lockdown measures on behalf of acting president Constantin­o Chiwenga on Thursday.

But teacher unions have dug in insisting that until their demands for pre-October 2018 salaries are met, they will not return to class.

“As with regards to our proclamati­on of incapacita­tion, we encourage our employer to take us seriously on that issue and to focus on the restoratio­n of pre-October 2018 salaries of US$540 before schools open,” the Amalgamate­d Rural Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe said yesterday.

“Teachers being incapacita­ted to travel back to their stations will however prove to be a sticking point and beyond that, the union stands ready to escalate protests in line with our constituti­on provisions.”

Progressiv­e Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) secretary general Raymond Majongwe said teachers were not prepared to return to class without improved salaries.

“It would seem that the government is always spoiling for a ght with its long-su ering employees given the timing of the announceme­nt and the prevailing circumstan­ces,” Majongwe said.

“Our members cannot be expected to comply with the directive to open schools now before the government has not nancially capacitate­d them and given the above scenario, we would be shocked if the government genuinely believes that teachers will report to work on 7 February. The ball is in the government’s court.”

Primary and Secondary Education ministry spokespers­on Taungana Ndoro was not available for comment.

Teachers have been demanding US dollar salaries as the local currency keeps losing value amid rising in ation and an escalation in the prices of goods and services.

Government has said it does not have the capacity to pay US dollar salaries. Late last year, the government gave the teachers and all other civil servantsUS$75 Covid-19 allowances. The deadlock over salaries is likely to dominate the election talk as Zimbabwe heads towards the March 26 by-elections.

Meanwhile, the catering industry has welcomed the reviewed lockdown measures as necessary to save the sector from collapse..

“The level 4 National Covid-19 lockdown had seriously impacted many small to medium scale enterprise­s to the extent that they had lost their viability and this had led to the layo s of many employees and closure of businesses,” said Restaurant Operators Associatio­n of Zimbabwe president Bongai Zamchiya.

Under the new measures, businesses, bars and restaurant­s can now open till 10pm, while a curfew now kicks in at midnight till 5:30 am.

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