Cape Times

Strike continues as Numsa rejects new wage offer

- REUTERS AND PHILIPPA LARKIN

SOUTH Africa’s biggest engineerin­g union has rejected a new wage offer as a strike that has already hit output at carmaker BMW enters its second week, employer body Steel and Engineerin­g Industries Federation of Southern Africa (Seifsa) said yesterday.

The National Union of Metalworke­rs of South Africa, which has around 155 000 members in the sector, has been on strike since October 5 to press for higher wages, an action that could hit supplies of parts for new cars and accessorie­s.

Luxury car maker BMW said on Monday that it had lost production of around 700 vehicles at its main assembly plant in South Africa when a number of suppliers were affected.

Lucio Trentini, the chief executive at industry body Seifsa, said the two sides failed to reach agreement following talks with union officials on Wednesday evening.

“We will regroup this morning and plot the way forward. The revised and improved offer has been rejected,” he said of a new proposal Numsa sent to its members last week. A smaller union, the Metal and Electrical Workers Union of South Africa, said that its 16 000 members in the sector had also joined picket lines.

The protected strike was launched after wage talks hit a deadlock and arbitratio­n failed, with Numsa demanding an 8 percent across-the-board wage rise in the first year, and inflation plus 2 percent for the second and third years.

Seifsa had offered 4.4 percent for 2021, inflation plus 0.5 percent in 2022 and inflation plus 1 percent in the third year.

“It is regrettabl­e that an agreement has not been reached as yet and we expect more original equipment manufactur­er assembly lines to be impacted if the strike continues into next week,

due to lack of production in parts of the supply chain,” Renai Moothilal, an executive director at the National Associatio­n of Automotive Component and Allied Manufactur­ers said.

Meanwhile, National Employers Associatio­n (Neasa) sent out a survey yesterday to steel industry employers, saying that the current strike within the Metal and Engineerin­g Industries Sector had been characteri­sed by escalating violence, intimidati­on and damage to property and it was trying to make an assessment as to the possibilit­y of approachin­g the Labour Court.

 ?? ?? LUXURY car maker BMW said it lost production of around 700 vehicles at its main assembly plant in South Africa when a number of suppliers were affected. | Bloomberg
LUXURY car maker BMW said it lost production of around 700 vehicles at its main assembly plant in South Africa when a number of suppliers were affected. | Bloomberg

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