Zimbabwe Situation

Final demand: Zimbabwe’s debt defaulters

Source: Final demand: Zimbabwe’s debt defaulters – BBC News September 12, 2016

Zimbabwe is being hit by a tidal wave of debt – defaulters are on the rise as the ailing economy continues to hit ordinary citizens hard.

Many are losing their properties to debt collectors or live in fear of having their homes given to creditors.

Thirty-two-year-old Hazel Mhembere, who lives in the dormitory city of Chitungwiza, 30km (18 miles) south of the capital, Harare, suffers this daily anguish.

She and her husband, Tafadzwa Chingandu, lost their jobs last year.

Both of them worked at a local bank, both lost their jobs and both had taken out loans.

“Due to the circumstances of us losing our jobs, we could not meet the requirements to pay off our existing salary-based loans – supposed to be paid off over a period of two years,” says Ms Mhembere.

Now the $1,500 (£1,160) debt is proving hard to settle and they endlessly receive letters of demand despite having pleaded with the bank.

Farai Katsande, president of the Zimbabwe Banks and Allied Workers Union, says the issue of debt among his members is a major cause of concern as the unemployment rate now stands at about 90%.

“In Zimbabwe, [once] you get out of employment, there is very slim chance, if any chance at all, that you will get alternative employment.”

The stress is also having affecting their health, with Mr Chingandu now needing hypertension medication.

Their ordeal is mirrored across the nation.

According to the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), between 25,000 and 30,000 workers have lost their jobs since a July 2015 Supreme Court ruling which allowed employers to terminate contracts without giving any benefits or redundancy payments, as long as their workers were given three months’ notice.

”We have nasty incidences happening as a result of the Supreme Court ruling. Our members, that include those of banks, have been dispossessed of their properties,” says Japhet Moyo, ZCTU’s secretary-general.

“We have had incidences of high levels of stress among our membership and many are under medication. It’s a big crisis.”

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