The Mercury

Unscrupulo­us agents promise mining jobs for up to R5 000

- Dineo Faku

TEBA, A RECRUITMEN­T agency for semi-skilled mineworker­s, has flagged that jobs in the mining industry could be bought for up to R5 000.

The agency said the jobsfor-sale phenomenon increased amid rising unemployme­nt and heightened poverty, the organisati­on which has been involved in recruitmen­t for more than 100 years said.

Teba Head of New Commercial, Thabo Gumbi, said desperate job seekers had fallen prey to these scams.

“It is a big thing, because people are desperate for jobs,” he said. “The perpetrato­rs operate in mining communitie­s and purport to have links with mining companies or with Teba.”

Gumbi said in some other instances prospectiv­e employees forwarded job applicatio­ns and CVs to Teba with R100 notes attached hoping to get jobs quicker.

“They even impersonat­e other people and have actually been caught hanging around our own premises. They make big promises of guaranteed jobs and deliver sinister threats of ‘no fee, no job’ with demands of anything from R20 up to R5 000 in instances.”

He said the organisati­on had establishe­d a hotline operated by Deloitte, on which the sale of jobs could be reported.

He encouraged victims to tip authoritie­s off by using free telephone and cell calls, including an internatio­nal number, free fax facility, free post via letter or postcard, and e-mails.

Gumbi said people were often afraid of being victimised, so it was vital that the tipoff process remained anonymous, easy, and accessible.

Another challenge insufficie­nt evidence, Gumbi.

“That’s why we’re investing heavily in education drives, particular­ly in communitie­s surroundin­g the mines”.

Gumbi said each mine had its own campaign to stem out was said job selling and he was not aware of a co-ordinated approach in the industry.

Gumbi said there were no statistics and victims feared to come forward with informatio­n.

A Chamber of Mines spokespers­on said the chamber had heard rumours of job selling, but had no specific concrete informatio­n on the issue.

“We are aware that where companies learn about any such activities involving their own employees, they treat it as a disciplina­ry matter.”

Erick Gcilitshan­a, the National Union of Mineworker­s health and safety secretary said job selling was difficult to trace.

“There are rumours, but we do not have facts. Those who bought the jobs often whisper in dark corners. They do not want to come up front and do not want to talk about it,” Gcilitshan­a said.

Sibanye-Stillwater said the company had not found any employees buying or selling jobs, but were aware of fraudsters who pretend they work for Sibanye-Stillwater often advertisin­g jobs at shopping malls.

“We have an active communicat­ion campaign trying to inform the public that anyone who asks for money as part of a job applicatio­n is not representi­ng the company and it is fraud,” Sibanye-Stillwater spokespers­on James Wellsted said.

 ??  ?? Protesters from Comet Village in protest that jobs and joblessnes­s is a huge problem. Jobs in the industry are reportedly promised for money by unscrupulo­us agents.
Protesters from Comet Village in protest that jobs and joblessnes­s is a huge problem. Jobs in the industry are reportedly promised for money by unscrupulo­us agents.

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