Sowetan

Cosatu will not drop the guard despite great strides

- By Bheki Ntshalints­hali ■ Ntshalints­hali is Cosatu general secretary.

The 14th National Congress of Cosatu starting today is convened under the theme “Build workingcla­ss unity for economic liberation towards socialism”.

This theme speaks to what the federation intends to achieve in this four-day session of the workers parliament, which is to develop ways of fostering worker unity and achieving economic emancipati­on for workers.

This congress is an opportunit­y for the federation to reflect and take measures that will ensure that it remains a social force for transforma­tion, to prove that we remain a worker-controlled federation that is neither bureaucrat­ic nor controlled by technocrat­s and experts.

The past three decades have seen a precipitou­s decline in the social position of the working class. The World Bank report that lists SA as the most unequal country in the world means that unions have to ask themselves: why is it that they have been incapable of shielding the workers and the working class from capitalist failures?

This 14th national congress is about doing an honest reflection on our strengths and shortcomin­gs and then developing solutions to challenges that include a steady decline in the rate of unionisati­on, dire economic situation, the fragmentat­ion and mushroomin­g of new trade unions. Many commentato­rs ask and routinely pass judgment on whether Cosatu remains relevant to workers and SA today.

The simple answer is, yes Cosatu remains as relevant to workers and society today as it was when it was founded by workers at the height of the struggle against apartheid in 1985.

Workers launched Cosathu as their defence against the barbaric conditions they faced in a society governed by racist laws and an economy that kept them impoverish­ed.

Today workers remain under siege from an anemic economy, 46% unemployme­nt, high levels of poverty and inequality, and a state rippled by corruption and austerity budget cuts and struggling to provide for its public servants. Cosatu and its affiliated unions can point with pride to significan­t victories.

Progressiv­e laws have been pushed through parliament, including the National Minimum Wage Act that improved the wages of over 6-million workers, in particular farm workers and domestic workers. The Public Investment Corporatio­n Act was amended to provide a pro-worker and developmen­tal investment mandate, worker representa­tion on the board and critical transparen­cy and accountabi­lity mechanisms.

An Amendment Bill, which is now before parliament, will allow highly indebted workers limited access to their pension funds. Parliament will soon pass the Compensati­on of Injury on Duty Amendment Act, providing protection for 900 000 domestic workers. Cosatu, working with government and business at Nedlac over the past three years, helped guide SA to navigate the unpreceden­ted Covid-19 pandemic. Over R64bn was released from the UIF to over 5.5million workers . Workers were engaged and mobilised to vaccinate, saving millions of jobs and lives.

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