Business Day

New wage offer fails to stop plastics strike

- Theto Mahlakoana Political Writer mahlakoana­t@businessli­ve.co.za

The eight-week violent strike in the plastics sector, which claimed its first fatality last Friday, is continuing in spite of a proposed wage settlement offer that exceeds the demands tabled by the unions.

The Plastics Convertors Associatio­n of SA, an employer body, said on Thursday that it would seek the interventi­on of “high ranking” government officials to end the labour dispute.

Members of the National Union of Metalworke­rs of SA (Numsa) and the Metal and Electrical Union of SA, embarked on a strike at manufactur­ing, moulding and packaging companies across the country when wage talks deadlocked two months ago.

The strike has been marred by intimidati­on, destructio­n of property and violence, with employers issuing warnings weeks ago that if not stopped, the violence would escalate.

Numerous attempts to interdict the strike have also failed.

On Friday, a security guard at a plastics factory in Springs was doused with petrol and set alight. He succumbed to his injuries while an employee who was assaulted at a plastics company in the same area three weeks ago is still in intensive care.

Plastics Convertors Associatio­n of SA CEO Johan Pieterse said the damage caused to employers’ properties in Ekurhuleni amounted to hundreds of millions of rand and would devastate some businesses and affect jobs.

A mediation process led by the Commission for Conciliati­on, Mediation and Arbitratio­n (CCMA) led to a proposed settlement agreement which all employer bodies agreed to.

The unions were yet to budge on the offer that lifts the lowestpaid general workers’ wages to R43 per hour and the highestpai­d skilled workers to a R77 hourly rate, working 40 hours a week.

Entry-level employees are currently paid R28.07 per hour.

Pieterse said the strike had died down in most parts of the country with the exception of the Ekurhuleni region.

He said the strike was no longer about wages and conditions of work. “We have settled the demands for wages and conditions of work, what we are not willing to settle for is not to pursue disciplina­ry action or charges for destructio­n of property and assault.”

The associatio­n said it was determined to file a damages claim against Numsa, adding that there was evidence that placed the union’s members at factories where petrol bombs were used to damage property and assault workers.

Pieterse said they would also proceed with contempt of court charges following Numsa’s failure to adhere to a court interdict by the labour court that ruled against the use of violence and intimidati­on.

Numsa has in the past denied that its members were involved in any violence.

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