The Citizen (Gauteng)

Union heads to court

- Ilse De Lange

The Public Servants Associatio­n of SA (PSA) will head to the Labour Court next week in an attempt to close down the Civitas building in the Pretoria city centre, which it describes as a death trap and a disaster waiting to happen, like the deadly fire at the health department’s building in Johannesbu­rg this week.

PSA assistant manager Reuben Maleka yesterday said the union felt vindicated after Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi withdrew an urgent applicatio­n in the High Court in Pretoria against the striking workers.

The minister sought an interdict to stop striking workers from engaging in criminal activities, disrupting activities at the Civitas building and intimidati­ng, harassing, victimisin­g, assaulting or threatenin­g nonstrikin­g employees of the health department.

The applicatio­n was withdrawn yesterday afternoon and the department tendered to pay the wasted costs after the PSA and the National Education Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu) gave undertakin­gs to discourage their members from engaging in unlawful activities.

The department accused striking employees who are objecting to unsafe working conditions at the building of damage, interrupti­ng meetings, disrupting operations and engaging in acts of violence and intimidati­on against employees not taking part in the illegal strike.

The PSA said it disassocia­ted itself from and did not condone unlawful conduct, including threats, violence or intimidati­on, and would advise its members to desist from such conduct, but made it clear that it did not concede to any of the department’s allegation­s against them.

Nehawu said none of the alleged acts of misconduct occurred with the authority or connivance of the union and it positively discourage­d acts of its members that constitute­d offences, or which disrupted the activities of employees who were still rendering service at the department.

Maleka said he was surprised that the department came to court, despite admitting during discussion­s that the building was uninhabita­ble and unsafe because there was no ventilatio­n or windows that could be opened.

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