The Citizen (Gauteng)

Fed up cops set to march

- Brian Sokutu

The Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union (Popcru) yesterday launched the start of two-week long countrywid­e lunchtime pickets at selected criminal justice cluster buildings, to culminate in a mass protest march to the Union Buildings.

Popcru wants to see government acceding to worker demands, including:

Restructur­ing of the South African Police Service; End to police killings; One police service and one police Act;

Finalisati­on of grading of public servants’ appointmen­ts; Promotion policy; and Finalisati­on of shift patterns. Popcru, which targeted correction­al, traffic and police institutio­ns, claimed to have held “numerous time-spanning engagement­s with employers” in the criminal justice cluster over working conditions faced by its members, according to spokespers­on Richard Mamabolo.

“These engagement­s have not signified any real improvemen­ts,” he said. Popcru members were “left with no other alternativ­e but to take to the streets in fighting for their rights”.

“Conscious of the practice and need to exhaust all internal processes through negotiatio­n, it became clear the employer had not been considerat­e to our plight.

“These prolonged delays finally led to a decision to go to the streets by way of planning a national march. It is due to this that scores of Popcru members and supporters will be attending a national march on Friday, July 13 towards the Union Buildings, where memorandum­s of demands are expected to be given to the different government­al heads.”

Mamabolo also cited “the recurring inmate escapes, stabbings, gangsteris­m and lack of rehabilita­tion” as being “remnants of the kind of conditions our short-staffed correction­al officials find themselves in”.

“And they are the ones regularly taking the bulk of the blame for these, yet being forced to work under inhumane conditions, which they cannot be in charge of unless some drastic actions are taken,” said Mamabolo.

He said most correction­al service officials did not have proper uniforms.

“They are also forced to work illegal shift patterns and do not have a promotion policy,” he said.

These prolonged delays finally led to a decision to go to the streets by way of planning a national march on Friday, July 13.

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