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View Full Version : South Africa: ’Lonmin settlement a victory - struggle pays!’



Crux
28th September 2012, 15:47
’Lonmin settlement a victory - struggle pays!’

28/09/2012
"We are inspired to continue the fight in the mines which continue to resist our united action."
Statement of the Rustenburg Joint Strike Coordinating Committee, 19 September
http://www.socialistworld.net/img/20120927Grafik478512363273665235.jpg
After six weeks of defiant strike action in the teeth of violent attacks by police acting on behalf of the mining bosses, when over 40 miners were killed, the Marikana platinum miners have won a significant 22% pay increase and a R2,000 payment for loss of earnings from mine owners, Lonmin.
Members of the Democratic Socialist Movement (CWI South Africa) have played an important role in the miners’ struggle, in particular, through the adoption of the demand for an industry-wide general strike.
South African capitalists are fuming in the news media, complaining that the pay concession will lead to "contagion" throughout the rest of the mining industry.
The following statement was issued by Rustenburg Joint Strike Coordinating Committee on 19 September:

"The Rustenburg Joint Strike Coordinating Committee sees the settlement between the Lonmin management and strike committee as an important victory not just for the Lonmin workers but for the general strike without which the employer would not have come to the table.
"We are inspired to continue the fight in the mines which continue to resist our united action.



Lonmin’s agreement to a 22% adjustment to wages, which means Rock Drill Operators’ basic wages are up to R11,078, plus a one-off "bonus" of R2,000, constitutes a victory on its own when workers across the economy have been forced to accept effective wage cuts through below-inflation increases.



But most important is the fact that the Lonmin bosses had to recognise the workers’ power to organise themselves independently of them and their stooges.



The framework of negotiations above the heads and behind the backs of us has been torn down.



The concession that has been won has come at a very high price - 44 dead, many more injured, arrested, tortured and harassed.
The settlement can never make up for the loss of the comrades who were murdered by the government in defence of the mining bosses or hide the true colours of the state that were exposed with the massacre on 16 August - the first state of emergency since the apartheid days.
The only way we can begin to give them justice is by moving the struggle they spearheaded onto a higher level - we cannot continue dying fighting for crumbs.



We therefore remain determined to spread the Rustenburg-wide general strike in demand of a R12,500 living wage.
The strike is growing stronger in nearly all Rustenburg mine operations - Anglo Platinum, the world’s biggest platinum producer, Impala Platinum (second biggest), Samancor and Xstrata workers have now been joined in strike action by the workers of Royal Bafokeng’s Rasimune mine as well as by organised communities.



A very small minority of workers was back at the shafts Anglo tried to reopen yesterday [18 September].
We call on workers and communities across the country to join us and take the struggle for a better life into their own hands.
We continue to be shot at, harassed and intimidated by the police and army that have been sent to Rustenburg.
Yesterday, several striking Anglo workers were shot with rubber bullets, without provocation, by police.



We urge Cosatu [Confederation of South African Trade Unions] delegates at their ongoing national congress to remember that ’an injury to one is an injury to all’, to support our action unconditionally and to call a general strike for a R12,500 living wage and for an end to the shooting of workers.
We also call on workers and communities from throughout the country to join us in a march to Union Buildings, Pretoria on Saturday 29 September to demand justice for the comrades killed, national living wage of R12,500, the ending of the state of emergency, for a workers’ and communities’ independent investigation into the Marikana massacre, the re-employment of all workers unfairly dismissed from the mines, nationalisation of the mines under democratic control of workers and communities, to allow for decent housing, clean running water, electricity, sanitation, roads and quality education and work for all."

Peoples' War
28th September 2012, 16:44
22% = less than 1/10th of what they were demanding. Which was 300%.

This isn't a victory considering what was lost in the struggle.

Crux
28th September 2012, 18:13
22% = less than 1/10th of what they were demanding. Which was 300%.

This isn't a victory considering what was lost in the struggle.
This is just the beginning.

Os Cangaceiros
28th September 2012, 22:20
Wow, a 300 percent pay increase? They were really shooting for the moon...

Peoples' War
28th September 2012, 22:29
This is just the beginning.
I hope you're right, comrade.

Crux
4th October 2012, 22:37
http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-10-04-wildcat-strike-movement-may-birth-new-political-party

bricolage
6th October 2012, 20:33
South Africa is about to explode.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/05/us-safrica-strikes-idUSBRE8930W320121005

Crux
6th October 2012, 21:17
The "Joint Strike Coordinating Committee" of all mines on strike in Rustenburg calls for a march next Saturday to confront the government. (http://www.socialistworld.net/doc/5980)

Q
7th October 2012, 13:42
Wow, a 300 percent pay increase? They were really shooting for the moon...

Lonmin workers were getting 4200 Rand (about 365 Euros or 480 Dollars) a month. A 300% wage increase would barely get them on what should be considered as a minimum wage.

And before you make the point how much cheaper everything must be in South-Africa, the Lonmin workers live in grandiose "houses" like these:

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3241/2528807722_981fff0d1f.jpg

A 300% increase was a modest demand.

Vladimir Innit Lenin
7th October 2012, 18:27
Lonmin workers were getting 4200 Rand (about 365 Euros or 480 Dollars) a month. A 300% wage increase would barely get them on what should be considered as a minimum wage.

And before you make the point how much cheaper everything must be in South-Africa, the Lonmin workers live in grandiose "houses" like these:

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3241/2528807722_981fff0d1f.jpg

A 300% increase was a modest demand.

Indeed, my mother used to get paid £2.50 per hour before the minimum wage came in. Presumably she shouldn't have been so greedy in taking the minimum wage afterwards of over 200% higher, should have stuck to a 'reasonable' wage increase, eh?

Good point made Q!

Ocean Seal
7th October 2012, 18:37
Indeed, my mother used to get paid £2.50 per hour before the minimum wage came in. Presumably she shouldn't have been so greedy in taking the minimum wage afterwards of over 200% higher, should have stuck to a 'reasonable' wage increase, eh?

Good point made Q!
Well I don't think this was Os Cangaceiros' point. Its not about being reasonable, its just a great victory to defeat the exploiters this throughly.

bricolage
9th October 2012, 17:55
While we have grown 'used' to hearing of protests in several European peripheral nations, South Africa has turned the anti-austerity protest amplifier to 11 in recent days. From the Lonmin massacre and subsequent wage increase to the truck-drivers' strike and Amplats firing of 12,000 workers , Reuters is reporting that South Africa's local government worker's union has now said it will join a nationwide strike amid the labor unrest in the mining sector. Demanding 'market-related salaries' this strike would bring the South African economy to its knees - at a time of rising deficit concerns. Critically, this has dramatic repercussions. Since firing people is no longer an option as "Those who are dismissed will make sure that there will be no operations operating and that will cause a massacre just like at Marikana," some companies will be forced out of business (reducing supply) or suffer significant margin compression on cost increases leaving commodity producers struggling - which will inevitably mean prices for end-users will rise (slowing end-user demand or crushing their margins). It seems the South African labor unions found the M.A.D. card.



Via Reuters South Africa,

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's local government workers' union said on Monday it would launch a strike over pay in the next few days, the first sign of a wave of labour unrest in Africa's biggest economy spreading from the mines into the public sector.

Since August, close to 100,000 workers, including 75,000 in the mining sector, have downed tools in often illegal and violent protests that look likely to hit growth this year and undermine the government's efforts to cut its budget deficit.

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan has promised to reduce the deficit from the 4.6 percent of GDP forecast for this financial year. Any public sector wage increase would make that more difficult.

"The union is mobilising towards a national protest, which would begin as soon as this week," South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU) spokesman Tahir Sema said.

A majority of SAMWU's 190,000 members are expected to join the strike for "market-related salaries" which may last for one day or drag on indefinitely, Sema said.

...

Moody's cut South Africa's government bond rating last month, citing the government's difficulty in keeping up with economic challenges and widening strikes.

ELAND ON STRIKE

Wildcat strikes have already shut down large parts of the mining industry in the world's top platinum producer and a major supplier of gold, pushing prices of precious metals higher.

Xstrata is the latest victim, with workers at its Eland platinum mine walking out on Friday.

The mine is expected to produce 176,000 ounces of platinum this year, compared with forecast production nationwide of 4.9 million ounces of the precious metal used in jewellery and vehicle catalytic converters.

Anglo American Platinum (Amplats) fired 12,000 wildcat strikers on Friday, a high-stakes attempt by the world's top producer to squash illegal stoppages that have hit output at seven of its mines.

The dismissed workers were defiant and threatened a repeat of the showdown with security forces at rival Lonmin's Marikana mine that led to the police killing of 34 miners on August 16, the bloodiest such incident since the end of apartheid in 1994.

"Those who are dismissed will make sure that there will be no operations operating and that will cause a massacre just like at Marikana," said one worker representative, who asked not to be named.

...

A strike by more than 20,000 truck drivers entered its third week on Monday, hitting logistics companies and leading to filling stations running out of some grades of fuel. Wage talks with employers were expected to resume on Tuesday.

The main transport union, SATAWU, said it was gearing up for a one-day rail and port worker strike on October 15, which could hit exports of coal and other minerals.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-10-08/south-africa-shows-europe-how-anti-austerity-protests-are-done

officer nugz
9th October 2012, 18:20
And before you make the point how much cheaper everything must be in South-Africa...hey I think you can cut him a little slack here it's not like he was arguing against their demands