The Citizen (KZN)

SAA strike threat grows

- Sinesipho Schrieber

South African Airways’ troubles appear to be mounting as the National Union of Metalworke­rs of South Africa (Numsa) and South African Cabin Crew Associatio­n (Sacca) plan to join the proposed pilots’ strike aimed at forcing the dissolutio­n of the SAA board.

Numsa and Sacca blamed the board of running the state entity to the ground. They claimed the board was incompeten­t and had led SAA to drown in R1.2 billion of debt.

The three groups demand the appointmen­t of a CEO with experience in corporate turnaround strategy plans, as they had no confidence in the acting head, Zukisa Ramasia.

Viwe James, Numsa national infrastruc­ture coordinato­r at SAA, said the union was embarking on the strike to call for the current board to be wiped out. James said the board was inactive in implementi­ng turnaround strategies that would rescue the entity.

“We are in need of an accountabl­e and competent leadership. The current one failed to implement turnaround strategies and come up with solutions to the entity’s financial crisis.”

Sacca’s deputy president, Christophe­r Shabangu, said the associatio­n also believed the current board was of no value to the entity.

“SAA currently has a vacuum leadership that cannot save it from the financial crisis. Those currently there are incompeten­t and cannot fulfil the entity’s needs.”

Sacca and Numsa said they had been calling for the SAA board to be scrapped.

“We have consistent­ly made a call that the board must be reconstitu­ted and represente­d by representa­tives of labour, business, and the government,” said the associatio­ns and union.

Sacca gave the state parastatal almost three months to try and solve the raised issue or face strike action.

Financial constraint­s leading to low levels of revenue, long standing debts and challenges with liquidity were some of the reasons behind the call for a turnaround strategy.

The pilots’ troubles intensifie­d when former CEO Vuyani Jarana resigned in June following the board’s slow implementa­tion of his turnaround plan – a plan the unions said was to save cash-strapped SAA.

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