United Federation of Employers of Zambia Urges...

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 19 February 2026
📘 Source: Lusaka Times

TheUnited Federation of Employers of Zambia(UFEZ) has called on Government to declare road traffic accidents a national emergency, warning that rising fatalities are devastating families and undermining economic productivity. Speaking at the Special Drivers Safety Workshop and Six-Month Road Safety Study officiated by Labour and Social Security MinisterBrenda Tambatamba, UFEZ Executive PresidentHumphrey Mondesaid Zambia must treat road accidents with the same urgency as a national health crisis. “Over Christmas alone, 224 accidents were recorded, 23 of them fatal, claiming 28 lives.

During the New Year period, 136 accidents occurred, with 16 more deaths,” Dr Monde said, citing Zambia Police Service statistics. “These are not statistics. These are fathers, mothers and children.” He urged Government to mobilise key institutions, including the Ministries of Transport and Home Affairs, the Road Transport and Safety Agency (RTSA), employers, trade unions and civil society, to implement a coordinated emergency response plan.

“Declare road traffic accidents a national emergency. Just as we mobilise every resource to fight a health crisis, we must treat this challenge on our roads with the same level of seriousness, the same whole-of-government response and the same unwavering political will,” he said. Dr Monde noted that road crashes are weakening supply chains, increasing insurance costs, disrupting productivity and discouraging investment at a time when Zambia is positioning itself as a regional trade hub.

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Meanwhile,Federation of Free Trade Unions of ZambiapresidentKwibisa Muyaywasaid drivers remain the backbone of the economy but continue to face long hours, fatigue and unsafe working conditions. He cited Statutory Instrument No. 80 of 2016, which regulates driving hours for public service vehicle drivers, stressing that fatigue and overwork remain major contributors to accidents.

“Without drivers, our stores would be empty, our hospitals would lack medicines and our economic trade would grind to a halt. Yet for too long, these hands that steer the wheels of our development have been treated as spare parts, easily replaced and often ignored,” Muyaywa said. Muyaywa also raised concern over attacks on Zambian truck drivers along regional trade corridors, including the Democratic Republic of Congo route, and called on police to strengthen security. Representing theZambia Congress of Trade Unions(ZCTU), directorDeluxe Mwansa, speaking on behalf of president Blake Mulala, said road safety must be treated as a shared responsibility among government, employers and workers.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Lusaka Times • February 19, 2026

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