Sowetan

NUM toasts 40 years of fighting for workers with pride

- By Luphert Chilwane ■ Chilwane is NUM’s media officer

Forty years since it was establishe­d in 1982, the National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM) continues to be the shield and the spear, the weaponry it has always used to fight capitalist barbarism.

This gigantic trade union will at the end of this year commemorat­e and celebrate its 40 years of existence, proudly knowing that it has secured milestone living wages for its 200,000 members in the mining, constructi­on, energy and metal sectors.

It did that because such living wages and better conditions of employment will never be delivered on a silver platter.

For this financial year alone, the union secured a five-year wage deal with the world’s top platinum miner Amplats, a three-year wage agreement with gold producer Sibanye-Stillwater and a one-year wage agreement with Eskom.

NUM also concluded wage agreements with Ergo Mining, Thungela Resources and other major JSE-listed companies.

NUM was establishe­d on December 4 1982 in Klerksdorp, North West, under the leadership of Cyril Ramaphosa as general secretary, James Motlatsi as president and Elijah Barayi as deputy president.

NUM later became a key stakeholde­r in the formation of Cosatu. It also played a critical role in the process that ended the apartheid regime with SA’s first democratic elections in 1994.

It is through the NUM’s gallant fight that the mineworker­s who for many years in the past were given only a helmet and a pair of boots on their retirement, today receive retirement benefits.

The NUM fought hard for black mineworker­s to be allocated houses so that they could stay with their families, and also engaged mining companies through the Chamber of Mines to sell their housing stock to their employees at a discounted market price.

The union will continue to push for transforma­tion in the workplace and ensure there is an improvemen­t of workers’ economic welfare in the sectors where it organises.

The union also campaigns for full compliance with the Constructi­ons Charter and punitive measures must be undertaken where there is a failure to comply by companies.

The NUM will continue to campaign against outsourcin­g, casualisat­ion and labour brokering characteri­sing the constructi­on sector. The NUM continues to mourn the loss of lives of workers in all sectors the union is organising.

It continues to mourn the victims who lost their lives during the unfortunat­e Marikana tragedy in 2012. The NUM’s call has always been that those victims must be remembered.

It is unfortunat­e that what happened in 2012 has been projected and used by every disgruntle­d individual who wants to launch their political relevancy at the expense of the victims.

The NUM stands on the victories of the 1987 mineworker­s’ strike involving over 300,000 workers who, for 21 days, stood toeto-toe with the brutal private army of the Chamber of Mines.

Guinea-Bissau revolution­ary Amilcar Cabral said: “Hide nothing from the masses of our people. Tell no lies. Expose lies whenever they are told. Mask no difficulti­es, mistakes, failures. Claim no easy victories!”

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