News / National
ZCTU marchers demand that Mugabe fix the ailing economy
11 Apr 2015 at 15:28hrs | Views
Around 200 people from the country's main trade union on Saturday marched to government offices in Harare to demand that President Robert Mugabe fix the ailing economy and fulfill an election promise to create over two million jobs.
Workers belonging to the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) also protested against proposed salary and job cuts for civil servants.
Addressing the workers, ZCTU leader George Nkiwane said Mugabe's Zanu-PF government must fulfill its election promise to create over two million jobs because "we haven't seen any single job that has been created".
"We want a government that responds to the people's needs, nothing else," Nkiwane said in the capital Harare.
The workers want the government to do away with a proposed pay cut and also job losses.
The union held similar demonstrations in five cities across the country.
Despite a bloated public wage bill that eats up 70% of public revenue, government is still battling to pay many of its workers and often delays paying salaries.
Mugabe, 91, was re-elected in July 2013, promising to revive the moribund economy, hit by more than a decade of political instability.
The country's finance ministry in November projected economic growth of 3.2% in 2015, up from 3.1% last year.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said Zimbabwe faces a "difficult" economic outlook this year as it battles to clear arrears with international lenders.
Source - AFP