Unrest spreads as 15,000 gold miners strike

Industrial action has spread in South Africa with a wildcat strike by 15,000 gold miners,

Just a few workers reported for duty at in the fourth week of a stoppage at a platinum mine. Gold Fields International said its strike started on Sunday night and that senior managers were at the scene trying to find out the cause of the problem at the west section of its KDC mine. The east section of the mine was operating normally. At a second platinum mine, Implats, more than 15,000 workers are demanding a 10 per cent pay rise although they are continuing to work, a spokesman said. Lonmin platinum mine said just six per cent of its 28,000 workers turned up at its mine in Marikana, west of Johannesburg.

Strikers have threatened to kill any miners or managers who do not respect their demand for all work to stop until Lonmin agrees to a monthly take-home pay of 12,500 rand (£975), about double their current wages.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Miners said they were getting desperate and do not have enough money to feed their families because of the no-work, no-pay strike.

The government brokered the peace deal after police shot and killed 34 miners and wounded 78 on December 16, a mass shooting reminiscent of apartheid-era days that has shocked the country. The last of the dead miners were buried during the weekend, one in Lesotho and three in South Africa.

Union rivalry is at the root of violent illegal strikes that have been troubling the mining industry, the engine driving Africa’s largest economy. The breakaway Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union, or AMCU, has this year poached thousands of workers from the National Union of Mineworkers, South Africa’s largest and politically connected workers’ representative.

AMCU president Joseph Mathunjwa said that he will be attending wage negotiations at the Lonmin mine.

But he said his continuing participation depends on his union not being sidelined to observer status.

Related topics: