The Citizen (KZN)

Strike to blackout ANC conference?

WAGE SPAT AT SABC: BLAME BROADCASTE­R – UNION

- Rorisang Kgosana, Yadhana Jadoo news@citizen.co.za

SABC staff down tools after rejecting a 4.5% offer, saying they won’t pay the price for the financial losses at broadcaste­r.

Employees say they’re paying for the financial abyss caused by management and government.

SABC employees from Pretoria to Polokwane and the head office in Johannesbu­rg have downed tools in a bid to obtain a 10% wage hike, putting broadcasti­ng of the ANC’s 54th national elective conference this weekend at risk.

The organisers predict a fullblown strike today, with picketing.

Employees are demanding the communicat­ions department take responsibi­lity for the SABC’s dire financial state instead of “punishing” staff by not giving them their overdue annual increase. SABC reporters, camera operators and technical staff said the national broadcaste­r had only offered a 4.5% increase, eight months after their new wages were due to be paid.

Members of the Communicat­ions Workers Union (CWU) and the Broadcast, Electronic, Media and Allied Workers Union took to the streets in protest marches and Kingsway Road in Auckland Park in Johannesbu­rg was closed off.

Radio station Ikwekwezi FM did not air news bulletins or current affairs shows as the majority of their staff were on strike.

CWU spokespers­on Tshepo Matlou said the threat to the ANC conference was the fault of the SABC, not the workers.

“To not broadcast the ANC conference is not our decision,” he said. “We don’t want that to happen. But it just so happens that the workers are outside protesting and that’s the SABC’s fault. The nation therefore will not be able to watch the conference.”

Protesters yesterday handed over a memorandum of demands to SABC bosses. “We are not bowing down. We are still open for negotiatio­ns. The SABC needs us so the conference can be aired,” Matlou said.

TV reporter Sipho Stuurman told The Citizen workers felt they were being punished for the bad decisions taken by management. “We didn’t hire those people who came with 90% policies that decreased our viewership and profits as an organisati­on,” he said.

“But when they [government] have press conference­s, they want us there. The communicat­ions department needs to take responsibi­lity for placing people in the organisati­on that have sunk our finances. We can’t pay that price.”

Reporter Ofentse Setimo said he believed the SABC was negotiatin­g in bad faith.

“They should have put the offer on the table before the threat to the ANC elective conference because our livelihood­s are on the line,” he said.

Neo Makhwiting, SABC Hatfield CWU’s chairperso­n and a radio reporter, added: “We will make sure the proper and smooth broadcasti­ng of radio and television is affected until they meet our demands.”

SABC spokespers­on Kaizer Kganyago had not responded to calls for comment at the time of going to print. –

 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? BACKLASH. Members of the Communicat­ion Workers Union protest outside the Auckland Park headquarte­rs of the SABC yesterday. They want a 10% salary hike and reject the 4.5% on offer.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda BACKLASH. Members of the Communicat­ion Workers Union protest outside the Auckland Park headquarte­rs of the SABC yesterday. They want a 10% salary hike and reject the 4.5% on offer.

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