‘Illegal’ strike a misnomer

A man leads striking miners in a dance near Rustenburg. Strikes in South Africa are a constitutional right; they can only be protected or unprotected. Therefore the widely used term 'illegal' is wrong, says the writer.

A man leads striking miners in a dance near Rustenburg. Strikes in South Africa are a constitutional right; they can only be protected or unprotected. Therefore the widely used term 'illegal' is wrong, says the writer.

Published Jul 22, 2013

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Durban - The use of the term “illegal strike” is widespread. Some recent news reports say 5 600 miners embarked on an “illegal protest” at Anglo American Platinum’s Thembelani and Khuseleka mines; “illegal work stoppages” at South Africa’s biggest mail centre; workers at waste removal company Pikitup, who went on an “illegal strike”, would face “disciplinary charges”.

Following industrial action in De Doorns last year, Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant released a statement in which she said: “In the last few months, South Africa has had to contend with a wave of strikes – legal and illegal – in different sectors.”

In January, Anglo American released a media statement on its fourth quarter production report for 2012 in which it made reference to “illegal strikes” which, it said, had occurred at its Rustenburg, Amandelbult and Union mines.

Even the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) has used the term to describe industrial action.

But when is a strike illegal?

In an address last year to the South African Association of Labour Lawyers, Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi said it was incorrect to refer to strikes as illegal.

“There is significant confusion about the understanding of [what] constitutes ‘protected’ as compared to ‘unprotected’ strikes, with the latter often being incorrectly referred to as being ‘illegal’, or ‘unlawful’.”

“The LRA (Labour Relations Act) doesn’t speak to illegal strikes,” Thembinkosi Mkalipi, chief director of labour relations in the Department of Labour, told Africa Check last week.

“When you talk about something being illegal, there is a criminal aspect to it… In terms of the law, it talks about procedural and unprocedural strikes which the LRA defines as protected and unprotected.”

Dakarlo Singo, a supervising attorney with the Wits Law Clinic’s labour law unit, argues that it is inaccurate to describe any strike as illegal.

“The correct terminology is protected and unprotected. An unprotected strike is simply a strike that does not comply with the LRA,” he explained.

Jason Whyte, vice-president of the Western Cape branch of the South African Society for Labour Law, echoed these sentiments.

“In my view, the correct position is that an unprotected strike is not ‘illegal’, as it is not prohibited by a law, and thus cannot be visited by a criminal sanction.”

The right to engage in strike action is entrenched in Section 23 of the Bill of Rights. The LRA regulates strike action and “aims to advance economic development, social justice, labour peace and the democracy of the workplace”.

Neither the Bill of Rights or the LRA make any reference to legal or illegal strikes.

Section 67 of the LRA uses the term “protected strike” to describe a strike that complies with its provisions. The provisions require that:

* the dispute has been referred to a council or the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration;

* a certificate that a dispute remains unresolved must have been issued;

* 30 days must have elapsed since the referral; and

* a written notice of a strike must have been given to the employer 48 hours prior to its taking place.

If these provisions are met, then the strike will be protected, strikers may not be dismissed and no civil legal proceedings may be brought against them.

A strike is unprotected if it does not comply with the LRA. A court may grant an interdict against an unprotected strike and order the payment of compensation for any loss attributable to the strike.

Participation in an unprotected strike may also constitute a fair reason for dismissal, but the strikers are not acting illegally.

Whyte believes that the only other acceptable term to describe an unprotected strike would be “unlawful”.

“An unprotected strike does amount to misconduct in terms of the employer’s disciplinary code, and would amount to a breach of contract at common law. An employer may also seek compensation for damages arising as a consequence of unprotected strike action. In this sense an unprotected strike is unlawful.”

Violence is often associated with strikes in South Africa, but it has no effect on whether the strike is protected or unprotected.

“Sometimes during a protected strike, workers will commit some form of misconduct such as assault or intimidation.

“As a result, strikers may be dismissed by their employer, or charged, but the strike will remain protected,” says Singo.

While the right to strike is enshrined in the South African constitution, the LRA places limitations on employees’ working in essential services.

This includes employees in the parliamentary service, the South African Police Services and any other service – which, if interrupted, would endanger “the life, personal safety or health of the whole or any part of the population”.

However, a strike in an essential service is not illegal.

“The LRA says that you are not allowed to strike [in the essential services], but you can’t be arrested. The consequences are the same as an unprotected strike,” Mkalipi said.

The term “illegal” is widely misused to describe strike action. It cannot be used to refer to an unprotected strike. Describing a strike as illegal is inaccurate. While employees risk dismissal and civil legal proceedings for participating in an unprotected strike, they are not acting illegally.

Continuing to describe strikes as illegal misrepresents the nature of the industrial action, and the implications for strikers. It also implies that strikers are engaging in criminal activity when they are exercising their constitutional rights.

* The article above first appeared on Africa Check (http://www.africacheck.org), a non-profit organisation run from the Journalism Department at the University of the Witwatersrand, which promotes accuracy in public debate, testing claims made by public figures around the continent.

** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Newspapers.

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