Zimbabwe healthcare workers temporarily
call off wage strike
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[June 25, 2022]
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwean
healthcare workers halted a five-day-old pay strike and returned to work
on Saturday, but union leaders warned they would resume the walkout if
the government failed to make an improved wage offer within two weeks.
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Zimbabwean medical workers sit outside Sally Mugabe Hospital during a
strike by state doctors and nurses to press for higher pay, in Harare,
Zimbabwe, June 20, 2022. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo/File Photo |
Thousands of nurses and doctors at state-run hospitals in the
southern African country are demanding a hefty raise and wages
in U.S. dollars due to a slide in the local currency and brisk
inflation that has eroded the value of their earnings.
They went on strike on Monday after rejecting a government offer
to double their local currency wages, saying the 100% hike would
not even compensate for annual inflation that jumped to 131.7%
in May.
"The leaders of the Health Associations ... have resolved to
temporarily adjourn the industrial action and request the
healthcare workers to resume service," union leaders said in a
letter sent to government's Health Service Board on Friday.
They warned that they would "have no option left but to withdraw
service without notice" if the government did not offer
"meaningful" salary hikes within the next 14 days.
Under Zimbabwean labour law, essential workers have to seek
permission to strike, but the union leaders say they would not
need to do so if they decided to resume this week's walkout.
Most of the country's nurses earn 20,000 Zimbabwe dollars ($53)
a month, according to the Zimbabwe Nurses' Association.
They are demanding monthly pay of $540, which is equivalent to
what they received in 2018 before the local currency slumped.
($1 = 378.0000 Zimbabwe dollars)
(Reporting by Nyasha Chingono; Editing by Helen Popper)
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