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Under fire AirZim capitulates

BY SHAME MAKOSHORI UNDER fire Air Zimbabwe (AirZim) administrator, Reggie Saruchera buckled under pressure on Monday and rehired 300 workers fired by the airline under controversial circumstances five years ago, NewsDay Business can reveal. Saruchera’s dramatic summersault came a week after his office had told our sister paper, Zimbabwe Independent that AirZim had no capacity to reappoint them following their landmark Supreme Court victory delivered on December 7. The workers responded by slapping him with multiple charges spanning from “gross maladministration, incompetence, mismanagement and wrongful and illegal deprivation” of a total of $100 million in unpaid salaries over five years. Led by the militant National Airways Workers Union vice-president Elijah Chiripasi, who passed on in a traffic accident on Monday, a few hours before AirZim said they must return, the workers had on December 24 approached the High Court demanding Saruchera’s expulsion. On December 7, the Supreme Court ordered AirZim to reinstate them to positions they held when they were expelled after the controversial Zuva judgment in July 2015, which triggered wholesale firing of workers at short notice. The late Chiripasi, a war veteran, did not live to see the fruits of his five-year struggle for labour justice following the accident that was confirmed by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) on Monday. “The ZCTU is saddened by news that vice-president of National Airways Workers’ Union Elijah Chiripasi passed on in a road traffic accident,” ZCTU president Peter Mutasa said. “Although he had left the ZCTU, he was a member of the general council for a long time. We commiserate with his family and friends,” he added. NewsDay Business can report that a few hours after the accident, AirZim wrote to workers’ legal counsel, Caleb Mucheche advising that it would abide by the ruling. “The airline wishes to advise yourselves (in your capacity as legal representatives of the respondents) that in compliance with the Supreme Court judgment of December 7 2020 on the same matter, the airline has reinstated the respondents to their previous employment with the airline with effect from December 7 2020. The said letters are ready for collection at the airline head office. We want to notify the said respondents to collect their letters within seven working days from the date of receipt of this communication,” the letter read. However, even if the airline agreed to draft them back to their positions, the workers will move into a totally different terrain. Many things have changed at AirZim. Back in 2015, it was limping. But there was a semblance of hope following the arrival of two Airbus A320 jetliners, which were being used to open new routes and rebuild the airline’s lost markets. AirZim entered the Tanzanian market in 2016, only a year after relaunching the Harare-Lusaka route using the Chinese assembled MA60 airliners. Most of this fleet has been grounded for various reasons. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic grounded airlines this year, AirZim’s oper