• Home
  • About

#Shutdown Zim2016

Aggregated news, videos, opinion and more

  • News Articles
  • NGO Statements
  • Video & Audio
  • People Speak
  • Opinion / Analysis
  • Get Involved
You are here: Home / News Articles / Bloomberg News / Mugabe’s Zanu-PF blames Western Embassies for protests

Mugabe’s Zanu-PF blames Western Embassies for protests

July 7, 2016

Source: Bloomberg News

http://mgafrica.com/article/2016-07-07-mugabes-zanu-pf-blames-western-embassies-for-protests/

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s ruling party accused western embassies of sponsoring Wednesday’s strike by civil servants over the government’s failure to pay salaries on time.

“We know they are being sponsored by the western embassies and some failed political parties,” Ignatius Chombo, secretary for administration in the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, told reporters in Harare, the capital.

Traffic was normal on roads leading into the capital on Thursday. More than 100 protesters are scheduled to appear in a magistrate’s court on charges of involvement in public violence, police spokeswoman Charity Charamba told reporters. The Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association, which called a three-day stayaway action, said that while some students were returning to schools, most of its members won’t go to work.

“By and large most of our members are still on strike despite the intimidation and threats from the authorities,” the association’s secretary-general, John Mulilo, said by phone.

Pay Delays

Wednesday’s labor action was called following the Finance Ministry’s announcement that it was delaying pay for state workers, including the military, and riots on Monday sparked by protests by taxi drivers over alleged police harassment. Mugabe’s administration has faced a worsening cash shortage in recent months.

Since abandoning its own currency in 2009 to end hyperinflation, Zimbabwe has used mainly U.S. dollars, as well as South African rand, euros, and British pounds. The government spends about 83 percent of its revenue on wages for state workers, according to Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa.

The leader of an anti-government group known as #ThisFlag, Baptist pastor Evan Mawarire, threatened late Wednesday in a video on Facebook to call a strike for two days next week if the government fails to remove roadblocks that drivers say the police use to demand bribes; pay civil servants on time; take action against corrupt ministers; remove import controls; and rescind plans to introduce “bond notes” in October to ease the cash crisis.

On Monday, Harare was hit by riots as minibus taxi operators staged demonstrations in suburbs around the capital to complain that police routinely demand money when they stop vehicles to check whether they are roadworthy. Violent clashes also erupted last weekend at Zimbabwe’s main border post with South Africa, forcing its closure, when the government banned the import of certain goods.

Mawarire said that if the demands are not met, “we will be shutting down the country again on Wednesday 13 July and on Thursday 14 July.” Corrupt ministers “must be fired, they must lose their jobs and face justice,” he said.

Source: Bloomberg News

Filed Under: Bloomberg News, News Articles Tagged With: protest

Search

Inspiring Quotations

"The determined efforts, and spirited focus by Zimbabweans from all paths and circles of life against authoritarianism as epitomised by #Tajamuka, #ThisFlag, churches, political parties, individuals etc just transmits a 'zing' of confidence, hope and dawn of a new dispensation from my skull nerves to my balls right to the tip of my foot. Authoritarianism and the despotic dispensation are under electrocution."
- Adolf, Kubatana subscriber in reply to our question asking what keeps people inspired during these tough times
" It was good and permissible when the flag since 1980 was carried by every Harry and Tom to Rufaro Stadium or National Sports Stadium to support Zimbabwe's national team the Warriors. It is good and permissible when the flag is carried about by women and children flocking to the airport to routinely receive the President from his many foreign travels. It is good and permissible if the flag is mutilated and redesigned on the party regalia of the country's self-acclaimed LIFE RULING SINGLE PARTY. It is now bad and not permissible when it is carried by those who demand that the sacrifices of those who lost their lives and years in the liberation struggle be respected by those in power through fighting corruption; practising good governance; public accountability by bringing to book those who are responsible for the missing $15 billion diamond revenues; fiscal austerity by cutting down on the many annual trips the President embarks on; by cutting on extravagance through avoiding the purchase of expensive Range Rovers when the govt is very broke to the point of asking for financial help from those it says are destabilising the economy and country."
- Zvakwana Taneta
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Email: info [at] kubatana [dot] net
WhatsApp: +263 772 452201
Twitter feed is not available at the moment.

Follow

@263Chat // @ali_naka // @all africa // @BBCAfrica // @ConcernedZimCit// @crisiscoalition // @DavidColtart // @DougColtart // @wamagaisa // @dewamavhinga// @fuzzy_goo // @guardian // @hararenews // @HealZim // @joeblackzw // @KalabashMedia // @KudakwasheChits// @LanceGuma // @lsmakani // @mailandguardian // @MurunguMutema // @NewsDayZimbabwe // @PastorEvanLive // @ZiFMStereo // @ZLHRLawyers

If you’re not Outraged, you’re not paying Attention