The Citizen (KZN)

Marikana: ‘profit before workers’

ALWAYS REMEMBER: GOVT PUT PROFIT BEFORE WORKERS, SAYS MALEMA

- Yadhana Jadoo news@citizen.co.za

Those in power wanted us to forget the brutality by police under the ANC government. Julius Malema EFF leader

ANC’s Zizi Kodwa says at commemorat­ion political parties are using tragedy for point-scoring.

Opposition parties should not use the Marikana Massacre of August 16, 2012 for political point-scoring but rather look at lessons drawn from a tragedy that cost the lives of 34 striking miners during police dispersal operations five years ago, the ANC says.

“Political parties continue to use the Marikana tragedy for political scoring,” ANC spokespers­on Zizi Kodwa said yesterday.

He was speaking on the fifth anniversar­y of the incident, which shocked South Africans and the internatio­nal community, making it to CNN’s list of top news stories of that year.

At the time, television audiences watched as police used live ammunition to disperse a group of striking miners.

Thirty-four people died on the day and all they had demanded was a R12 500 wage from their employer, Lonmin Platinum.

Attending the commemorat­ion in Marikana yesterday were Joseph Mathunjwa, president of the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union, and opposition party leaders including the DA’s Mmusi Maimane, the Economic Freedom Fighters’ Julius Malema and the United Democratic Movement’s Bantu Holomisa.

All demanded that August 16 be made a public holiday, as with the March 21 commemorat­ion of the Sharpevill­e massacre.

Malema said “those in power wanted us to forget the brutality by police under the ANC government” but this day should belong to the working class in South Africa.

The EFF has said the massacre “must always remind us that this government always chooses the side of profit and white monopoly industries instead of black workers. The EFF has vowed to ensure that the ANC is punished for presiding over this massacre; we shall ensure it is removed from power and replaced with an economic emancipati­on government.”

Maimane has called for the National Prosecutin­g Authority to prosecute those involved in the killings. The DA has said that, five years later, not a single person has been criminally prosecuted and no one has taken political responsibi­lity.

Kodwa said such a tragedy should not have happened and that was why a commission of inquiry into the incident had been establishe­d. It cleared some of those implicated and its recommenda­tions were carried out.

Many attending the commemorat­ion said they were still waiting for justice to be served on those who gave instructio­ns to pull the trigger and those who eventually followed these orders.

Kodwa said the event changed the labour dispute landscape and the lesson to be learnt here was that the gap between the “haves and have-nots” must be closed.

“We must create a framework so there is some engagement in the mining sector.” Companies should improve conditions for miners, he added. –

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? Mineworker­s and members of the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union yesterday commemorat­e the fifth anniversar­y of the killings of 34 striking platinum miners shot dead by police outside Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine in Rustenburg, 100km...
Picture: Reuters Mineworker­s and members of the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union yesterday commemorat­e the fifth anniversar­y of the killings of 34 striking platinum miners shot dead by police outside Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine in Rustenburg, 100km...
 ?? Pictures: Reuters ?? SAY IT LOUD. Miners and members of the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union attend the fifth anniversar­y commemorat­ions to mark the day in 2012 when 34 striking miners were shot dead by police outside Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine in...
Pictures: Reuters SAY IT LOUD. Miners and members of the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union attend the fifth anniversar­y commemorat­ions to mark the day in 2012 when 34 striking miners were shot dead by police outside Lonmin’s Marikana platinum mine in...
 ??  ?? SOLIDARITY. Miners and members of the public arrive for the fifth anniversar­y commemorat­ion of the Marikana massacre.
SOLIDARITY. Miners and members of the public arrive for the fifth anniversar­y commemorat­ion of the Marikana massacre.

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