HARARE: Striking Zimbabwe doctors on Monday defied a court order to return to work, saying a pay rise offered by the government failed to meet everyday costs.

Doctors remained home for a 43rd consecutive day, striking for better pay after their salaries were eroded by the country’s spiralling inflation.

Zimbabwe’s labour court ruled the action “unlawful” on Friday and ordered the medics back to their wards within 48 hours.

The Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA) announced Sunday it would appeal to the Supreme Court. “We noted the court order but unfortunately we don’t have the means by which to comply,” said ZHDA spokesman Masimba Ndoro on Monday.

“We remain incapacitated... There is nothing we can do when we don’t have the means to go to work and to meet our basic needs,” he told AFP.

The doctors say the value of their pay shrank 15-fold over the past year — a legacy of hyperinflation caused by economic mismanagement under ex-president Robert Mugabe.

His successor Emmerson Mnangagwa has so far failed to redress the situation. Fuel prices have increased by more than 400 percent since the start of the year, and the ZHDA said that doctors had to use their savings just to show up to hospital each morning. Negotiations with the government have been deadlocked since the ZHDA rejected a 60-percent salary rise offer.

With pay slips worth less than the equivalent of $100 (91 euros) in some cases, they are demanding doctors’ salaries be pegged to the US dollar and have appealed to international bodies to supplement their wages.—AFP