The Mercury

People are striking for wrong reasons, says Froneman

- | Dineo Faku

SIBANYE-STILLWATER chief executive Neal Froneman yesterday told investors that the protracted Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union (Amcu) strike was necessary to address underlying relationsh­ip issues as attitudes between the company and the unions harden.

“There is a perception that a strike signifies bad industrial relations. Sometimes a strike is necessary to sort out relations,” Froneman told the Investing in African Mining Indaba held in Cape Town yesterday.

Sibanye and Amcu’s relationsh­ip has soured since 15 000 of workers at Driefontei­n, Kloof and Beatrix mines went on a strike on November 21 to demand higher wages.

Froneman, who has previously said that the performanc­e of the platinum division had helped to cushion the impact of the strike, called for a solution to the strike.

“We need to find a solution to the strike. My concern is the people who have been striking for the wrong reasons,” said Froneman.

Amcu last month led thousands of members at Sibanye’s platinum division on a sympathy strike to ensure the company acceded to its demand for a R1 000 salary increase.

The strike has claimed four lives, and there have been reports of intimidati­on of non-striking workers and violence, with homes petrol-bombed.

Mineral Resources Minister Gwede Mantashe said the Department of Mineral Resources would not intervene, as the government had opted for collective bargaining, not wage increases determined by the state.

“My own view is that unions must be given space to bargain. The state must not try to determine settlement­s. If we intervene, it should be done quietly – talk to the employer, talk to the union and management.

“Nudging them to find a solution – that is what should happen,” said the minister.

The trust deficit between mining employers and unions saw the fivemonth-long platinum belt strike in 2014 led by Amcu.

Froneman said union rivalry for membership and political manoeuvrin­g were problemati­c, while the Labour Relations Act was biased towards the employee and created a barrier to growth.

He said the past few years had been poor, but the new leadership of President Cyril Ramaphosa was promising.

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