Cape Times

Solidarity to take employers to court if workers are axed for failing to vaccinate |

- Edward West

TRADE union Solidarity’s chief executive, Dirk Hermann, said on Friday that the organisati­on would take employers to court who dismissed employees because of their choice not to be vaccinated. Anton van der Bijl, head of legal matters for the organisati­on, said they knew of no cases at this stage where employees had been dismissed for refusing to be vaccinated, and a Department of Employment and Labour directive on the issue had only recently been published on May 28. The legal firm Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr said last week that while the directive did permit mandatory workplace vaccinatio­n policies, the employer also had to take into account and accommodat­e refusals by employees to be vaccinated for health and constituti­onal rights reasons. Hermann said Solidarity had obtained its own external legal opinion on the directive, which had confirmed that employees have a right to choose not to be vaccinated, and employers may not deprive them of this choice. “Solidarity is of the opinion that there is certainty in the directive from the department that employees have the right to refuse the vaccine on the grounds of constituti­onal and bodily integrity reasons and that employers must do everything in their power to accommodat­e such employees,” Hermann said. Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr said employers needed to accommodat­e the refusing employees, either by providing the employee with counsellin­g services, access to confer with a trade union, or a health and safety committee member. For employees that refused to be vaccinated on medical grounds, the employer could refer the employee for further medical evaluation, with the consent of the employee. Employers could also, if possible, allow the employee to work from home, or the employer could suggest self-isolation in the workplace for the employee, or require the employee to wear an N95 mask in the workplace. According to Solidarity, it would be illegal for an employer to make vaccinatio­ns compulsory without considerin­g individual­s’ constituti­onal rights such as bodily integrity. “The new directive from the Department of Labour’s point of departure is that vaccinatio­ns may not be unilateral­ly compulsory,” said Hermann. “The directive also stipulates that in highly exceptiona­l circumstan­ces and after proper analysis and consultati­on, employers can expect employees to be vaccinated in certain work areas,” said Hermann. |

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