< http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/story.jsp?story=81637 >
Three million in strike against Mugabe 'tyranny'
By Basildon Peta in Harare
04 July 2001
Zimbabwe ground to a standstill yesterday when almost three million
workers staged a largely peaceful strike in defiance of President
Robert Mugabe, who branded their action illegal.

Virtually all factories and most shops in the main urban centres were
closed as the nation heeded a call by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade
Unions (ZCTU) to stay at home to protest against a recent 70 per cent
increase in the price of fuel, and President Robert Mugabe's
"continued mismanagement of the Zimbabwean economy and his escalating
human rights abuses".

Reacting to the popular support for the two-day stayaway - expected to
cost the country's limping economy more than 20 million pounds -
Washington Matombo, the ZCTU president, said: "I am humbled by the
people's response. This is a clear message against Mugabe's continued
tyranny and misrule of this country ... The people cannot take it any
more."

Zimbabweans ignored persistent warnings on state radio that they
should report for work because the strike was illegal. The government
put the entire Zimbabwe National Army and police on standby in
anticipation of violence.

Militants from the Zimbabwe War Veterans' Association said they would
attack foreign companies that closed during the stayaway. "We want to
identify such people and if they are not citizens of this country we
are going to deal with them ... [make] them evacuate our country
within a day," Joseph Chinotimba, one of the veterans' leaders, told
state radio.

Police patrols continued in some of Harare's restive townships late
yesterday and roadblocks were mounted around big cities and towns.

The government had said it would deploy buses to carry people to work
and would cancel the licenses of private transport operators
supporting the strike. But few buses of the state-owned Zimbabwe
United Omnibus Company were seen carrying commuters.

The strike action was largely peaceful. In the capital, Harare, police
said three bread delivery trucks had been looted and the suspects had
been arrested.

In Epworth township, two photographers from the Associated Press news
agency, and from the opposition Daily News were arrested when they
tried to take pictures of a group of policemen on patrol.

Marking a significant show of support and a departure from South
Africa's uncertain diplomatic stance in past months, the powerful
Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) said it backed the
strike and accused Mugabe of "terrorising the economy and ordinary
citizens".

Reports from Mutare in the east, Masvingo in the south and Bulawayo in
the south-west said many businesses were shut, although government
offices were functioning.

The ZCTU is a close ally of Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which has emerged in the past
year as President Mugabe's most serious challenger since he came to
power 21 years ago.

Political tension has barely abated since a violent campaign in the
run-up to general elections in June last year, when at least 31 people
died. The violence was blamed on the ruling Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF). The MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, is
expected to challenge 77-year-old President Mugabe in an election due
by May next year.

Zimbabwe's economic crisis has pushed unemployment above 60 per cent
and inflation above 70 per cent. An estimated 70 per cent of
Zimbabwe's 12.5 million people live in poverty.

Previous national work stoppages organised by the ZCTU have
successfully shut down the economy. A series of strikes in 1998
escalated into food riots. Eight people were killed in clashes with
police and troops.

The ZCTU represents about 90 per cent of the organised labour force,
about 1.2 million workers in 32 affiliated unions.

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