Cape Times

Numsa accused to hold talks to ransom

- Sandile Mchunu

THE SA ENGINEERS and Founders Associatio­n (Saefa) has slammed the National Union of Metalworke­rs of SA (Numsa) for holding the wage talks to ransom and demanding a wage increase that was far above the country’s inflation rate.

Numsa’s secretary-general Irvin Jim issued a warning on Tuesday that the union intended to take industrial action to “shut down” the country’s engineerin­g sector.

Saefa hit back yesterday and said that it seemed that Numsa did not really have the desire to avoid strike action, despite the massive financial repercussi­ons this would have on all employees in the sector.

Saefa executive director Gordon Angus said the move by the union was not unexpected, but it was entirely unnecessar­y.

“Saefa has been aware of Numsa’s apparent desire to initiate strike action, seemingly at any cost as evidenced by their unwillingn­ess to participat­e meaningful­ly in any of the dispute meetings thus far,” Angus said.

‘Absurd offer’

Jim claimed that the employers were imposing a strike on to them by forcing them into this undesirabl­e position because of the absurd offer they have placed on the table.

“We are calling on every concerned stakeholde­r to knock sense to the intransige­nt group of employers that have been frustratin­g the process of negotiatio­ns, or else we will shut down the entire economy on a scale which this country has never seen before,” Jim said.

Numsa is demanding a 15 percent wage increase across the board based on the actual rate workers are earning, not on the new minimum rate.

Meanwhile employers proposed, among other things, a three-year wage agreement offering of 5.3 percent wage hike across the board for the first year of the agreement based on the minimum rate, and not the actual rate that workers were earning.

Angus chastised Numsa for their unwillingn­ess to budge on their “unrealisti­c” 15 percent increase or to discuss the other demands made by employers and said this provided a clear indication that the organisati­on always had the sole intention of initiating a strike.

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