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Zimbabwe state doctors go on strike over pay

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Call off strike, patients beg Imo resident doctors

Zimbabwe’s public sector doctors went on strike on Tuesday, demanding a further salary increase of 401 per cent that they want to be indexed to the U.S. dollar, despite accepting an earlier offer from the government of a 60 per cent pay rise.

Zimbabwe is mired in its worst economic crisis in a decade, with triple-digit inflation, rolling power cuts and shortages of U.S. dollars, fuel and bread that have revived memories of the hyperinflation that forced it to ditch its currency in 2009.

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 demonstrators.

The main unions representing doctors and teachers, who make up the bulk of public service workers, said they had rejected the government’s salary offers, which would see the lowest-paid worker earning 1,023 Zimbabwe dollars ($90.45) a month.

The doctors accepted their 60 per cent pay increase but said it was not sufficient to avert planned strike action.

The teachers are not currently on strike.

Also read:  Disaster: Zimbabwe’s President lauds Nigeria for extending assistance

“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,’’ the Head of the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA), Peter Magombeyi, told Reuters.

“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 embarking on strike 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 per cent 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. ($1 = 11.31 Zimbabwe dollars) .

 

 

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Israeli Intelligence Says It Has Foiled Hezbollah Attack On Official; Expands Gaza Military Operation Goals

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Israeli Intelligence Says It Has Foiled Hezbollah Attack On Official; Expands Gaza Military Operation Goals

Israel’s domestic intelligence service Shin Bet claimed it had foiled a bomb attack by the Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah targeting a former senior Israeli security official.

The attack had been planned for the coming days, according to Shin Bet.

An explosive device had been equipped with a remote detonator and connected to a camera and a mobile phone, which would have allowed the bomb to be detonated from Lebanon by Hezbollah.

This is according to the statement released.

The intelligence service also accused Hezbollah of being responsible for an attempted attack in a park in Tel Aviv in September last year.

At the end of July, an Israeli attack on a house in a suburb of the Lebanese capital Beirut killed a high-ranking commander of the Shiite militia, Fuad Shukr. Hezbollah responded by threatening retaliation. 

In the meantime, Xinhua reported on Tuesday that Israel has expanded its goals of the military operation in Gaza to include the safe return of northern Israel residents who were evacuated.

The evacuation was due to the conflict ongoing with Hezbollah along the Israel-Lebanon border.

A statement from his office said the decision was approved during an overnight meeting of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet.

The ministers updated the goals “to include the following clause: the safe return of northern residents to their homes,’’ the statement said.

On Monday, Israeli Defence Minister, Yoav Gallant, told White House special envoy Amos Hochstein, who arrived in Tel Aviv to discuss efforts toward de-escalation between Israel and Hezbollah.

Gallant said that the window for a diplomatic resolution was closing.

Military action is the only way to achieve calm on the northern border, said Gallant.

Tens of thousands of residents on both sides of the border have been displaced due to the fighting.

Hezbollah has said it would cease fire if Israel and Hamas agree to end the fighting. 

– dpa

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New Israeli Poll Shows Netanyahu’s Party Advancing

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New Israeli Poll Shows Netanyahu’s Party Advancing

An opinion poll on Friday showed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party would form the largest single party in parliament.

That would be if an election were held now, underlining a gradual recovery since the Oct. 7 attacks last year.

The poll, published in the left-wing Ma’ariv daily, showed Likud winning 24 seats, against 32 at present, its highest score in the Ma’ariv poll since Oct. 7.

It put the National Unity Party led by centrist former general Benny Gantz on 21. 

Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition with a clutch of nationalist-religious and ultra-Orthodox parties would lose any election held now, with 53 seats in the 120-seat parliament, against 58 for the main opposition bloc, according to the poll.

Nevertheless, Likud’s advance shows how far Netanyahu has moved since last year when his standing was hit by public fury at the security failures when Hamas gunmen stormed into Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages.

New Israeli Poll Shows Netanyahu’s Party Advancing
New Israeli Poll Shows Netanyahu’s Party Advancing

Earlier in the war against Hamas in Gaza, opinion polls regularly showed Likud gaining no more than 16-18 seats in parliament.

The survey also showed Netanyahu’s standing as prime minister recovering, with respondents favouring him over any alternative potential candidate apart from former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who is now out of politics.

Despite the coalition, tensions between Netanyahu and several ministers, and regular protests by Israelis demanding a deal to bring home the Gaza hostages, the government has held together for almost two years.

An election is not due until 2026.

Netanyahu has clashed with Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, from his party, and two hardliners – National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.

While Likud has climbed steadily, support has not followed for the two nationalist religious parties, Jewish Power, led by Ben-Gvir, and Religious Zionism, under Smotrich, giving both parties an incentive not to leave the government. 

– Reuters

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No Fewer Than 129 Killed In Congo In Attempted Prison Break

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No Fewer Than 129 Killed In Congo In Attempted Prison Break

Congolese Interior Minister, Jacquemain Shabani on Tuesday said 129 people have been killed in the Democratic Republic of Congo in an attempted prison break.

On his X account, Shabani said authorities shot dead 24 inmates of the Makala prison in the capital Kinshasa, while dozens of others were suffocated or trampled to death.

According to the minister, some female prisoners were raped during the chaos on Monday night.

He said at least 59 people were also injured. The police and army were able to bring the situation under control.

Shabani said the number of victims is preliminary.

The property damage was considerable. The Administrative buildings, the infirmary and the food depot had been completely burnt down, the minister added.

Security forces held an emergency meeting on Tuesday to discuss the case.

Prison breaks are a frequent occurrence in the conflict-torn Central African country. Hundreds of inmates often manage to escape together. 

– dpa

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