Nationalisation call not confusing - Vavi

Beleaguered union boss Zwelinzima Vavi will come face to face with his rape accuser when an internal Cosatu hearing into his conduct starts. File photo: Neil Baynes

Beleaguered union boss Zwelinzima Vavi will come face to face with his rape accuser when an internal Cosatu hearing into his conduct starts. File photo: Neil Baynes

Published Apr 7, 2013

Share

 

Durban - The Congress of South African Trade Unions was not confused about its call for nationalisation, Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi said on Sunday.

Nationalisation was a policy of the tripartite alliance which emanated from the 1955 Freedom Charter, Vavi said in Durban at the federation's KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Shopsteward Council.

“Any revolution that does not address who owns what will not be a revolution,” he said.

Vavi, who received a rousing welcome, said there needed to be greater state intervention in the economy and “nationalisation as it was envisaged in the Freedom Charter”.

Speaking on the state of the trade union movement in the country, Vavi said there were too many unions. He said the fact that there were 193 unions in the country was an indication that the labour movement was too fragmented.

Of those 193 unions, he said 117 did not belong to one of the country's four large labour confederations, namely Cosatu, the Federation of Unions of SA, National Council of Trade Unions and the Confederation of SA Workers' Unions.

He also pointed out that within Cosatu, various unions overlapped in their representation. He pointed out that the SA Democratic Teachers Union and the National Education Health and Allied Workers Union often overlapped in the field of education.

He cited the National Union of Mineworkers and the National Union of Metalworkers of SA as being two unions which overlapped in their representation of workers and that on occasion there were “poaching wars” between unions.

It was a concern that unions were perceived as being corrupt. He said that a large percentage of the union members themselves perceived the unions to be corrupt.

Referring to himself, he said: “If any person inside or outside the federation brings evidence that shows I ever betrayed the trust of workers, I will resign. I will not wait for disciplinary proceedings.”

The African National Congress' KwaZulu-Natal chairman Senzo Mkhize told the council that relations between the union and the ANC were good.

He, however, warned the alliance of becoming too complacent in the 2014 general election.

“If you think we are facing a small force, that's a real delusion. We are facing the challenge of defending our revolution next year,” he said. - Sapa

Related Topics: