Cape Times

Amcu warns gold industry on wage negotiatio­ns

- Luyolo Mkentane

THE ASSOCIATIO­N of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union (Amcu) has warned that the gold industry could be brought to its knees if a solution is not reached during the upcoming wage negotiatio­ns.

The union this week extended its R12 500 minimum wage a month to gold producers including Harmony Gold, Sibanye Stillwater and AngloGold Ashanti, charging that this was a living wage. Amcu president Joseph Mathunjwa said the demand could put workers in a better place against higher taxes and fuel price.

Mathunjwa said the union also wanted an increase in benefits including severance pay to transport costs, longer maternity leave and a five-day work week instead of the shift system. “We cannot pre-empt the outcomes of these gold commodity wage negotiatio­ns,” Mathunjwa said. “We will engage the companies with facts and figures in persuading them in a living wage mandate and other conditions of employment.”

Amcu embarked on a five-months strike in the platinum belt in 2012, demanding a minimum wage of R12 500 in the sector. Thirty-four mine workers were killed by police, shot outside Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine near Rustenburg. Ten others, including security personnel and police officers, died in violent clashes days preceding the massacre.

Harmony Gold spokespers­on Sihle Maake said the company was collaborat­ing with other gold mining companies.

“We are not at liberty to say anything.” She referred further questions to communicat­ions agency Russell and Associates’ Memory Johnstone, who handled communicat­ion on behalf of the Minerals Council South Africa.

AngloGold Ashanti spokespers­on Chris Nthite said: “The negotiatio­ns will get under way. We will respond in due course with our own offer. There will be intense negotiatio­ns.”

The National Union of Mineworker­s, the biggest union in the gold industry, is reportedly demanding a two-year agreement, calling for entry-level undergroun­d pay of R10 500 a month.

Spokespers­on Livhuwani Mammburu said negotiatio­ns in the sector had not yet started. He, however, confirmed that the union had submitted its demands to the Minerals Council of South Africa. The council’s Johnstone said gold producers had received the demands of all the unions participat­ing in centralise­d collective bargaining. “The gold companies, under the auspices of the Minerals Council, will engage on the contents thereof during wage negotiatio­ns which will start in due course.”

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