The Herald (South Africa)

Mines chaos rattles top brass

ANC plans urgent meeting to bring situation under control

- Sipho Masombuka, TJ Strydom and Amukelani Chauke

AS miners vowed yesterday to shut down South Africa’s platinum industry, highlevel meetings were being planned to rescue the strife-torn mining sector. According to ANC insiders, an urgent national executive committee meeting will be held within days to discuss how to bring under control the chaos in mining and the unfettered power of expelled former youth league leader Julius Malema.

“We should be at the centre of what is happening now in the mines, without underminin­g Cosatu.

“Being quiet will not help us. We need to show that we are a governing party together with our alliance partners,” a senior ANC member said.

Last night, mining bosses met senior government officials and union leaders in an attempt to stem the violent strikes that started a month ago at Lonmin’s Marikana mine.

Anglo American chief executive Cynthia Carroll said they were “in touch with the authoritie­s at the highest level” to identify how they could work together.

The authoritie­s were both government and trade unions, according to a spokesman.

The National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM) has called a special conference tomorrow to discuss the events at Marikana and other platinum mines.

“We are highly concerned because these people can lose their jobs,” NUM spokesman Lesiba Seshoka said last night.

He pointed out that both Amplats and Goldfields had issued retrenchme­nt notices in June and July, and the NUM was concerned that the strikers were handing mining companies the power to retrench them.

Yesterday, striking miners at Marikana and the nearby Anglo Platinum mine outside Rustenburg formed a “war room” to fight together for salaries to be raised to R12 500 a month.

Almost 10 000 miners from Amplats are expected to join the strikers at Lonmin.

A mining executive, who did not want to be named, described the sector as “a runaway train”.

“The best-case scenario for the mining sector is to return everything to 3pm on the afternoon of the shooting at Marikana.

“But that still is a nightmare for management, workers and shareholde­rs because it would mean job losses, mine closures and economic decline.”

He said the platinum industry had been in severe pain already for a number of quarters. The mines simply could not pay higher wages and workers seemed unwilling to back down.

Marikana had been a loss-making operation before the shooting last month, as were many mines, accor- ding to a research report by JP Morgan, he said.

The executive was not aware of any industry-wide measures to save the industry nor of talks between government and companies.

He said to normalise things, someone had to stand up and speak the uncomforta­ble truth that wage increases would not happen but mine closures would.

In North West, mineworker­s rejecting the formal unions have formed a Rustenburg Workers and Communitie­s Forum under the leadership of the Democratic Socialist Movement, affiliate of the Committee for Workers Internatio­nal.

Executive member Mametlwe Sebei yesterday tried to persuade min- ers that a general strike should start in Rustenburg and be followed by a national strike and march to the Union Buildings.

“This battle can be won only if we are united,” Sebei urged at a mass meeting at Amplats.

About 12 000 miners went on strike at four Amplats shafts on Tuesday night, demanding salaries of R14 500 a month.

One of the strike leaders, Evans Ramokga, said they had been trying since May to get the NUM to take their demands to management without success.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? STRIKE ACTION: Mineworker­s take part in a march outside the Anglo American mine in North West province yesterday
Picture: REUTERS STRIKE ACTION: Mineworker­s take part in a march outside the Anglo American mine in North West province yesterday

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