Workers at Kawambwa Tea Company (KTC) are appealing to government to repossess the company in order to ease their sufferings.
The workers have alleged that the current investor has failed to run the company.
Speaking to ZANIS in Kawambwa, the workers’ representative, Peter Mutale, said government should urgently take over the company, accusing the investor of having failed them.
Mr Mutale, who was flanked by casual and permanent workers, charged that there was urgent need for the government to come in.
He said it was clear that the current investor has failed to run the company which he said is profitable because nothing has changed in terms of looking into workers plight.
He suggested that the government should get some shares if it fails to take over the entire company.
And Mr Mutale said there is need for management to consider increasing workers’ wages and salaries in order for them to catch up with the current economic crisis.
Mr. Mutale noted that prices of most essential commodities have increased but workers are still getting old salaries, which he called peanuts, which cannot sustain their families.
He added that the daily operation of the company is entirely dependent on the local people who have failed to run it, a move he said should also be checked.
And Mr Mutale has bemoaned lack of workers’ safety clothings and appealed to the company management to urgently purchase them.
Mr Mutale said workers had for a long time been using their own safety clothes and tools for them to operate in the factory and in tea fields.
He added that tea fields are infested with snakes and workers are working in fear as they are not protected with gum boots and pairs of overalls.
But speaking in a separate interview with ZANIS, acting factory manager, John Bunda, said he is happy that that the company has started improving.
Mr Bunda said at the moment, production of green leaf is 25 tonnes per day.
Mr Bunda said all the casual workers’ four months outstanding arrears have been paid but admitted that permanent workers have not yet been cleared their eight months’ salaries.
He said there is much improvement at the plantation as inputs were now in place since 200 metric tonnes of fertilizer have been received.
And a check by ZANIS at the tea estate found that almost all the fields were in tall grass because weeding came to halt for about six months after workers went on strike demanding to be paid their salaries and wages.