Striking South African miners reject wage offer
South Africa's platinum mineworkers rejected a fresh wage
offer at a public meeting Thursday, and vowed to continue a week-long strike
that has brought the sector to a stand-still.
Members of the Association of Mineworkers and Construction
Union crowded into a platinum belt stadium to hear details of a deal firms were
hoping would end a stoppage costing each of them as much as $9 million a day.
Anglo Platinum, Impala Platinum and Lonmin-- the world's top
three producers -- have proposed wage increases of at least seven percent for
each of the next three years.
But members of the Association of Mineworkers and
Construction Union gave the offer short shrift.
Informed of the terms by leaders, the stadium erupted with
jeers and with a cry of "asiyi" meaning we are not going back.
An estimated 80,000 workers downed tools last Thursday,
prompting the government to call talks between the union and the top three
mining firms.
"We've been mandated to go back to the drawing
board," said AMCU's Lonmin branch secretary Reuben Lesejane. "The
strike will end after our demands are met, for now the strike continues."
The union has called for a basic monthly minimum wage of
12,500 rand ($1,150), around double the current amount.
It is the same demand that spurred 2012 strikes, which
resulted in the police shooting dead 34 miners on one day.
The mood inside the stadium was one of defiance.
"The employers still do not want to give what we
want," said Lonmin employee Zenzo Mathale.
"The companies don't get it," he said. "They
only want profits. Things can't go on like this... but we are prepared to
fight."
Amos Letsi said the strike was hurting workers, who were not
getting paid, but he vowed to press on.
"Our demand is very clear, we want a living wage,
nothing else," said Amos Letsi. "People died for this, no one
listens."
Mine bosses who have shut down operations have appealed with
the union to consider the offer, saying its demand was "simply not
feasible in the foreseeable future."
South Africa produces 80 percent of the world's platinum --
used in products from catalytic converters to computer hard disks to dental
fillings, and around 134,000 people are employed in the sector.
The firms have warned that previous strikes have resulted in
rising operating costs and a sharp drop in platinum prices have led to the loss
of about 11,000 jobs since December 2011.
For miner Moses Mdingi, this work stoppage is merely the
continuation of a battle which began in 2012.
"The fact remains that we're still going to fight to
the end," said Mdingi, adding that the strike could go on for a month or
more.
"We are used to these things."
Outside the stadium workers had gathered, armed guards
manned gates to the mines with armed police keeping a close watch.
Meanwhile, the labour court has declared illegal a planned
gold mining sector strike called by the militant union, as the 2013 wage deal
was still valid.
Gold miners were last week expected to stop work on the same
day as their colleagues in platinum mining industry.
"The order interdicts the union from proceeding with
the strike or encouraging its members from embarking on the strike," said
the Chamber of Mines.
Mining firms AngloGold Ashanti, Harmony and Sibanye, whose
operations were threatened with a stayaway, had applied for an order against
it.
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