Business Day

Strikers threaten ‘total shutdown’

• Unions set December 2 as target date after nine marches

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Writer mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

Acting public service & administra­tion minister Thulas Nxesi had to duck for cover as angry marchers hurled missiles at him during a national march to the Treasury in Tshwane on Tuesday to demand aboveinfla­tion pay increases. Leaders of public service unions warned they would embark on a strike on December 2 if the government does not respond to workers’ demands.

Acting public service & administra­tion minister Thulas Nxesi had to duck for cover as angry marchers hurled missiles at him during a national march to the Treasury in Tshwane on Tuesday to demand above-inflation pay increases.

Leaders of public service unions affiliated to labour federation­s Cosatu, Fedusa, and the SA Federation of Trade Unions (Saftu) warned they would embark on a strike on December 2 should the government not respond to workers’ demands for a pay hike of 10% within seven days.

The “total shutdown” would affect almost all government services, they said, with the police, nurses, and other department­al officials expected to down tools.

“We have already issued a notice at Nedlac [the National Economic Developmen­t and Labour Council]; it’s up to them to invite the total shutdown or block it,” said Simon Hlungwani, convener of Cosatu’s joint mandating committee, who is also president of the Democratic Nursing Organisati­on of SA (Denosa).

The unions also demanded an end to austerity measures, the permanent employment of community health workers, teacher assistants and reservists; the filling of all vacant posts, and the insourcing of outsourced services, among other matters.

Marchers booed Nxesi when he received a list of worker demands and he was forced to take evasive action when objects were thrown at him. Tuesday’s march in Tshwane — eight others were held across the country — comes after the recent deadlock in negotiatio­ns at the public service co-ordinating bargaining council (PSCBC), which resulted in several public service unions receiving strike certificat­es.

UNILATERAL­LY

The protests follow Nxesi’s implementa­tion of the government’s final offer of a 3% increase as per the numbers contained in finance minister Enoch Godongwana’s mediumterm budget policy statement on October 26.

The public service unions demanded a 10% increase at the start of negotiatio­ns in May, but lowered the amount to 6.5% in line with the Reserve Bank’s headline inflation rate forecast for 2022.

But when Nxesi announced he would unilateral­ly implement the 3% offer, which includes a R1,000 aftertax cash gratuity that ends in March 2023, the unions reverted to their 10% demand.

The government is trying to rein in the public sector wage bill — now at more than R660bn a year — to an average annual increase of 1.8%.

The marchers from various unions — including the Public Servants Associatio­n (PSA), the National Education Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu), Denosa, the Police and Prisons Civil Rights Union (Popcru), the Health and Other Service Personnel Trade Union of SA (Hospersa), and the SA Policing Union (Sapu), held placards bearing slogans such as “Nurses work hard, treat us with respect”; “We say no to 3%”, and “Stop attack on collective bargaining”.

‘UNITED FORCE’

PSA president Lufuno Mulaudzi said: “We are here as a united force against this government to give us 10% ... They are pursuing the agenda of capitalist­s, enough is enough.”

Saftu president Ruth Ntlokotse commended workers for their action and said the private sector was now copying the government’s behaviour of reneging on signed wage deals. Workers are still angry after the government refused to honour the last leg of a three-year wage deal signed at the bargaining council in 2018, which it said was due to a lack of funds.

In February, the Constituti­onal Court ruled that the government could back out of the deal since the unions had been “unjustifia­bly enriched” from the “impugned collective agreement”.

SACP general secretary Solly Mapaila condemned the government for reneging on wage agreements, saying it sent the “wrong signal” to the private sector. To loud applause, Mapaila said the government does not deserve to be voted back into power if it could not accede to workers’ basic demands.

Nehawu president Mike Shingange pointed out that the people underminin­g collective bargaining are former trade unionists. President Cyril Ramaphosa, Godongwana and Nxesi are former union leaders.

“We trained them so well that they are now underminin­g workers [and] are killing and collapsing collective bargaining,” Shingange said.

Department of public service & administra­tion spokespers­on Moses Mushi said: “We have not received service delivery disruption­s, all public servants are at their work posts. Those who are not, the no work no pay [rule] will apply.”

Marchers refused to give Nxesi an opportunit­y to respond to the list of demands, singing derogatory songs and jeering him in scenes reminiscen­t of the recent Cosatu national congress during which ANC chair and minerals & energy minister Gwede Mantashe was booed off the stage and prevented from addressing delegates.

Ramaphosa also felt workers’ wrath earlier this year when they heckled, jeered, booed and prevented him from addressing a May Day rally in Rustenburg.

 ?? /Freddy Mavunda ?? Penniless: Acting public service & administra­tion minister Thulas Nxesi. Protests followed his unilateral implementa­tion of the government’s final offer of a 3% increase.
/Freddy Mavunda Penniless: Acting public service & administra­tion minister Thulas Nxesi. Protests followed his unilateral implementa­tion of the government’s final offer of a 3% increase.

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