Felix Magalela Mafa Sibanda

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Felix Magalela Mafa Sibanda
MP
Member of the Seventh Zimbabwean Parliament
for Magwegwe
Assumed office
September 2008
Preceded by Fletcher Dulini-Ncube
Majority 732 (24.6%)
Personal details
Nationality Zimbabwean
Political party Movement for Democratic Change - Tsvangirai

Felix Mafa is a Zimbabwean activist, politician and member of parliament for Magwegwe in Bulawayo for the MDC-T party, as well as being provincial spokesperson for that party.

In 1980 he was the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) candidate for Mashonaland Central constituency in Harare.

In 1985, he stood for ZAPU as a Glen View Candidate. This was done at the request of Joshua Nkomo himself. In 1999, his Glen View house set on fire by the Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front thugs and he was chased away from Harare and sent packing to Bulawayo or risk execution. In 1987. his eldest son Canan Mafa, a former Zimbabwe People's Revolutionary Army freedom fighter was abducted by ZANU PF Fifth Brigrade and drowned in the Zambezi river. He became the most outspoken person against Gukurahundi and eventually founded Post Independence Survivors' Trust, a pressure group to find justice against Gukurahundi perpetrators and healing for the victims.

As a trade unionist in 1981, Felix Mafa was the first person recorded in Zimbabwe's history to be responsible for nationwide civil servants strike for better wages and work conditions, including fighting for pensions, and medical services. In subsequent year, Felix continued to press the government for better conditions in civil government. He was the president of the Zimbabwe Teachers Union (ZITU) for many years.[1] The Minister of Labour said that the strike was illegal, and on 22 August, the general secretary, John Makoni, and deputy general secretary, Charles Chiiru, of the Public Service Association (PSA) were arrested. They were released the next day.

The strike was called off on 22 August, but thousands of workers stayed out. On 23 August, the government said that strikers were sacked. This was estimated to affect 70–80% of 180,000 civil servants. Armed riot police were deployed in the capital, Harare, on 27 August to keep watch over sacked workers who gathered in the central park.

The PSA was prevented from giving its viewpoint in the state-owned press. There were threats of arrests, intimidation and victimisation of strikers.

On 3 September, the government agreed to reinstate sacked workers who went back to work. However, managers were told to identify everyone who had gone on strike. Over 30,000 workers were identified and not paid for the two and half weeks of the strike. The government began to abolish jobs.

Nurses and junior doctors resumed the strike on 21 October because they had not got the increase promised by the government. On 28 October, doctors and senior nurses went back to work.

On 4 November, Dr. Farai Jiah was arrested and charged with inciting the strike. Dr. Austin Bene was arrested on 5 November. Both were sacked. Doctors went on strike again.

On 8 November, Felix Mafa, the ZITU president was arrested and sacked, though the charges were later dropped. Many nurses were fired and given one month to appeal.

The government started to advertise health service vacancies in South Africa and the UK.

On 11 November, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) and other sections of society held a demonstration in Harare in support of the strikers. The authorities refused to provide a police escort. Morgan Tsvangirai, the ZCTU general secretary, and Isaac Matongo, the ZCTU vice-president, were arrested for two hours and the crowd was tear-gassed before the march started. Riot police used tear gas and batons to disperse demonstrators. The government invoked the colonial Law and Order (Maintenance Act) against the strikers.

On 12 November, the ZCTU called a two-day national strike calling for the reinstatement of the sacked workers.

On 18 November, the Supreme Court referred the cases of the five arrested doctors and nurses for inciting workers to strike. The Harare Magistrates Court noted that the law might be unconstitutional thus violating the right of the accused.

On 26 November, after an appeal to President Mugabe, half the nurses and a third of the junior doctors had been reinstated. Union leaders were excluded. Nurses refused to go back until their leaders were reinstated. They said they would continue to press for a legal mechanism for collective bargaining and dispute resolution.

By 18 December, the two doctors were still not reinstated. The authorities also refused to reinstate five nurses, and three hundred nurses walked out again. The government said they would not be reinstated and tried to stop them getting jobs in local health institutions. Nurses who went back to work reported victimisation.

Prior to his involvement in MDC party politics, he was a civil society activist in the National Constitutional Assembly,[2] serving as Southern Region Organising Secretary[3] and Advocacy chairman.[4] He also serves as director of the Post Independence Survivors' Trust (PIST),[5] from its formation in 2004 until 2008. In the 1990s, Mafa was a teachers' trade unionist, for the Zimbabwe Teachers' Union.[6][7] He has spoken out strongly against the Gukurahundi[8] and Operation Murambatsvina.[9]

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Zimbabwe Civic Group Removes Spokesman Over Perceived Conflict , Voice of America, 6 November 2007 [1]
  3. Address by the Hon. Minister of Foreign Affairs, CDE. Simbarashe S Mumbengegwi To Western Diplomats on 19 March 2007 [2]
  4. National Constitutional Assembly Website
  5. Mugabe's wasteland, Guardian Weekly, Friday 30 March 2007
  6. Zim teachers to join strike when schools reopen, Sapa, 30 August 1996 [3]
  7. Zim strikes call for fair coverage, Sapa, 29 August 1996
  8. Orphaned in the 80s, persecuted today: Mugabe's victims twice over, the Guardian Tuesday 10 April 2007 [4]
  9. In the Midst of Restoring Order – Chaos, IPS: Politics-Zimbabwe