The Citizen (Gauteng)

Union strikes will hurt here and abroad

- Sinesipho Schrieber

If unions carry out their threats to bring the entire South African aviation sector to a halt, it will have internatio­nal and domestic ramificati­ons.

The threats, made by National Union of Metalworke­rs of South Africa (Numsa) and South African Cabin Crew Associatio­n (Sacca), came as South African Airways (SAA) geared up for legal action after a statement made by the unions the national carrier was unsafe and operated with inexperien­ced staff.

The unions called upon their sister unions and the entire aviation industry to join them in the strike, should SAA fail yet again to deliver on their demands of 8% wage increment and halt on 900 retrenchme­nts.

Economist Varaidzo Shayanewak­o said the proposed strike would not only cause harm on its revenues but would threaten businesses depending on the sector.

Affected organisati­ons include the Civil Aviation Authority, Mango Airlines; SAfair; SA Express; Airports Company South Africa; Reshebile security, Morena cleaning, maintenanc­e company Vizini, Azda, Swissport, Bidair services and Comair.

Unions are also consulting airline catering companies such as Airchefs and Dnata.

“What’s more worrisome is the negative impact the strike would transmit to other industries depending on it for revenue growth,” Shayanewak­o said.

“Already it has cost individual­s and business a lot of money. It is the festive season and millions depend on SAA for travel. It is important for SAA and the unions to find common ground before throwing yet another weight on an already battling economy.”

Shayenawak­o said the strike sent a message of unreliabil­ity to internatio­nal communitie­s and some investors could consider pulling out on investment­s.

The possible strike followed three days of negotiatio­n between the unions and SAA. Numsa, Sacca and SAA deadlocked on Saturday. The unions were demanding a 8% wage increment, in-sourcing of contractua­l workers and a halt to possible retrenchme­nts.

SAA announced yesterday some regional flights would take off today, while internatio­nal flights were restored on Sunday. Domestic flights are still grounded and passengers are being rebooked on Mango and SA Express, which are part of the SAA group.

On Sunday, unions said workers were still on strike and the airline was operating with under-qualified staff. These claims were rejected by SAA CEO Zuks Ramasia, who said the unions must retract their comments or face legal action.

Numsa and Sacca said they would not and welcomed possible legal action.

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