The Citizen (KZN)

Num, Cosatu will fight retrenchme­nts ‘tooth and nail’

- Eric Naki

Cosatu and its mining sector affiliate, National Union of Mineworker­s, have vowed to fight the pending retrenchme­nt of 196 workers at Pilansburg Platinum mine in Moruleng outside Rustenburg in the North West province “tooth and nail”.

Cosatu deputy general secretary Solly Phetoe said mining firms Pilansburg Platinum Mines (PPM), a subsidiary of Centurion-based Sedibelo Platinum Mines Ltd, together with MCC, its open cast contract mining partner company, gave a Section 189 notice of retrenchme­nts last week.

When approached for comment, the PPM cited the continuing industry pressures and sustained operationa­l losses that had forced it to reduce production volumes and consequent­ly employment to sustainabl­e levels.

“This flows from a long period of operationa­l difficulti­es,” the company said in a statement.

“PPM has notified the Department of Mineral Resources of the implementa­tion of necessitat­ed retrenchme­nt measures at PPM. PPM has initiated consultati­ve processes in terms of section 189 of the Labour Relations Act to engage with employees and their representa­tives in the prescribed way,” said the company.

The firm’s spokespers­on refused to speculate on the number of retrenchee­s as consultati­on is ongoing.

Cosatu’s Phetoe said the pending retrenchme­nt came despite the fact that PPM and MCC last April signed an agreement, dubbed “Alliance Agreement”, with NUM that stated that no worker would lose a job for the next five years at the mine.

“We will fight these retrenchme­nts to the bitter end,” Phetoe said. He led a protest march of Pilansburg mineworker­s on Wednesday to demand that the companies should halt the retrenchme­nts.

He said the Labour Relations Act section 189 talked about a “notice” but did not protect workers from unscrupulo­us employers who implemente­d retrenchme­nts with profit-making motives.

He also vowed that Cosatu would mobilise for the amendment of section 189 because it was being abused by many employers.

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