Cape Times

Numsa backs call for mass action

- ANA Reporter

THE National Union of Metalworke­rs of South Africa (Numsa) said yesterday it was concerned that the South African Federation of Trade Unions (Saftu), to which it is affiliated, and other workers’ groups had been excluded from making submission­s to the National Council of Provinces on contentiou­s new labour legislatio­n.

Numsa reiterated its position that proposed changes to the Labour Relations Act, the Basic Conditions of Employment Act and the proposed National Minimum Wage Bill – if passed in their current form – would result in workers being paid “slave wages”, and that it would be harder for them to embark on legal strikes.

“It is clear from the proposed laws that the ANC-led government wants to silence the working class by denying them their constituti­onal right to protest,” it said, adding that the conditions that would be created for workers under the laws would be similar to those that prevailed during apartheid rule which discrimina­ted against non-whites.

It said other labour organisati­ons including Saftu had not been adequately notified that the National Council of Provinces committee on economic and business developmen­t was receiving submission­s on the proposed labour laws, and had as a result missed the deadline. “The consultati­on process has been improper and inadequate.

“The majority of workers have not been consulted on these laws and yet the state intends to implement them anyway,” it said.

Unions have rejected a proposed minimum wage of R20 per hour as inadequate, among other controvers­ies around the new labour proposals.

“In South Africa today African (black) households earn five times less than white households and the poverty national minimum wage bill will do nothing to undo that legacy,” Numsa said.

It said it backed Saftu’s call to mobilise workers to reject these new laws, and that it would be involved in “intensifyi­ng mass action all over the country against this unrelentin­g attack on our hard won rights as labour”.

“The ANC-led government would not be in power if it had not been for the power of the working class,” said Numsa.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA ?? Numsa members in protest in this file photo. The union slammed the attack on the rights of labour.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA Numsa members in protest in this file photo. The union slammed the attack on the rights of labour.

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