Zimbabwe Public Doctors Embark on Strike, Rejects Pay Offer



Zimbabwe’s public sector doctors starts industrial action this Tuesday. They are demanding a further salary increase of 401 percent that must be paid in the U.S. dollar despite accepting an earlier offer from the government of a 60 percent pay rise.
Zimbabwe Doctors Start Strike
Source : Haru Matasa,, Aljazeera


President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government has proposed big pay rises for doctors and other public sector workers in an attempt to avert crippling strikes. Police have banned a series of protests called by the opposition in major cities and have used tear gas and water cannon to disperse recent demonstrators.

The main unions representing doctors and teachers, who make up the bulk of public service workers, are saying that they had rejected the government’s salary offers. This would have been an avenue where the lowest paid worker will be earning 1,023 Zimbabwe dollars or 90.45 US dollar a month.

The doctors accepted their 60 percent pay increase but said it was not sufficient to avert planned strike action. The teachers are not currently on strike.


The head of the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA), Peter Magombeyi, had said “we met with the government representatives yesterday and they promised to expedite other allowances for health personnel but so far it has just been empty promises.”

“They have taken us for granted for too long, but we are ready to go back to work as soon as they offer us something tangible, which has not been forthcoming so far.”

The Health Services Board (HSB), which represents the government, said in a statement late on Monday that it was surprised the doctors were taking strike action despite accepting the earlier pay offer.

ZHDA wants wages, which were previously pegged to the U.S. dollar, to be paid at the prevailing inter-bank market rate and says its members can no longer afford to report for duty due to surging inflation and the deterioration in the economy.

Their current salaries are worth less than 10 percent of what they were before the peg was scrapped due to high inflation.

At 1030 GMT on Tuesday, the Zimbabwe dollar traded at 11.31 against the U.S. dollar in the interbank market and 12.5 in the black market. Both rates are used to buy goods.

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