The Mercury

Fawu to meet with SAB on Zenzele fate

- Sisieko Njobeni

THE FOOD and Allied Workers Union (Fawu) will today meet representa­tives of Anheuser-Busch (AB) InBev and SABMiller in a bid to reach an agreement on the fate of the SAB Zenzele employee share programme.

Fawu general secretary Katishi Masemola said yesterday that Fawu met AB InBev and SABMiller representa­tives last week and was due to continue with the discussion­s today.

Fawu has taken an active interest in the mooted multibilli­on-dollar merger between AB InBev and SABMiller, because some of its members at South African Breweries (SAB), SABMiller’s wholly-owned subsidiary, are beneficiar­ies of Zenzele.

In a bid to ensure that the workers get a slice of the spoils from the mega deal, the union made submission­s when the merger went to the country’s competitio­n authoritie­s. The union has demanded that Zenzele beneficiar­ies should be treated like other SABMiller shareholde­rs.

Fawu wants the merging companies to accelerate the end of Zenzele so that beneficiar­ies can be paid out. The scheme is supposed to mature in 2020. Alternativ­ely, the union wanted the companies to pay an ex-gratia, once-off payment of an average of R165 000 per beneficiar­y, totalling about R1.5 billion, to be paid out in lieu of opportunit­y cost for staying “locked” in the scheme until 2020, Masemola said.

Public hearings

However, during the tribunal’s public hearings on the deal, Fawu withdrew from the proceeding­s, ostensibly to keep its options open. The options included approachin­g the Arbitratio­n Foundation of Southern Africa, “so that we can deal with this issue as a shareholde­r dispute”, Masemola said yesterday.

The union could also take the matter to the Equality Court or file an applicatio­n with the Constituti­onal Court, he said. Fawu has also maintained its threat of a strike if its demands are not met. “That remains an option for us. But that will depend on the outcome of our discussion­s,” Masemola said.

He said, if the parties failed to agree in their ongoing discussion­s, Fawu intended to take the matter to the Commission for Conciliati­on, Mediation and Arbitratio­n for conciliati­on on Thursday next week.A certificat­e of non-resolution in a dispute enables a union to embark on a protected strike after giving the employer 48 hours notice.

Both SABMiller and AB InBev yesterday confirmed talks with Fawu. “There are ongoing discussion­s, and there have been several meetings with Fawu in recent months to discuss Zenzele. We feel confident that the commitment­s AB InBev and SABMiller have made to enhancing the Zenzele scheme will benefit all participan­ts,” SABMiller spokesman Richard Farnsworth said yesterday. However, he declined to discuss SABMiller’s stance on Fawu’s demands.

AB InBev also said it had met the union “over… the past months to explain our commitment to broad-based black economic empowermen­t and discuss enhancemen­ts to the Zenzele scheme”.

The meetings come as AB InBev is steaming ahead with preparator­y work for the merger. The brewing giant, which is listed on the JSE, recently unveiled the organisati­onal structure and leadership team of the merged entity. The merger is expected to be completed on October 10, according to a timetable announced by AB InBev earlier this month.

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