Zuma: SA takes no sides in platinum strike

Published Mar 7, 2014

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Johannesburg - South Africa won’t take sides in a wage strike that halted output at the world’s largest platinum mines for more than six weeks, President Jacob Zuma said.

“We should not be subjective about our own positions,” Zuma said in an interview yesterday.

“Government is talking to both sides so we can find an amicable solution.”

Members of the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union marched on South African government offices in Pretoria yesterday as part of the labor group’s call for basic monthly pay to be more than doubled.

Talks between striking workers and Anglo American Platinum, Impala Platinum and Lonmin, which together account for more than two-thirds of all the platinum mined globally, collapsed March 5 after a state mediator said the parties remained far apart.

The AMCU wants pay for entry-level miners to rise to 12,500 rand from about 5,000 rand.

More than 70,000 members of the union have been on strike since January 23.

Producers say they have lost a combined $680 million in revenue and that employees have forfeited more than $300 million since the walkout started.

The union said it won’t back down from its demand as it handed a memorandum to an official in Zuma’s office at the Union Buildings yesterday.

The labor group called in the document for the resignation of Mines Minister Susan Shabangu, who it accused of “incompetence,” and said employers should change their position on pay.

 

‘With Blood’

 

“Our demands were submitted with blood on the mountain in Marikana,” AMCU President Joseph Mathunjwa told protesters at the Union Buildings.

He was referring to a strike at the mines of Lonmin Plc during which at least 44 people died in 2012.

“There is no way we are turning back on it.”

Lonmin, the third-largest producer, won’t meet its full- year sales target of at least 750,000 ounces of the precious metal because of the strike, it said this week.

The company said it can’t estimate the increase in costs caused by the walkout.

The price of platinum, used for jewellry and car catalytic converters to reduce emissions, has climbed 8.3 percent this year.

Platinum for immediate delivery fell 0.5 percent to $1,478.75 an ounce at 10:37 a.m. in Johannesburg today.

The mediator, the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration, said March 5 it “has decided to adjourn the process to give all parties an opportunity to reflect on their respective positions.”

 

‘Discouraging Events’

 

The companies have offered to raise entry-level wages, which range from 5,000 rand to 5,700 rand a month, to as much as 7,200 rand by 2015.

On March 4, the AMCU said it would give the companies three years to meet its minimum target after first demanding immediate increases to that level.

The producers said the demand remains unaffordable.

Amplats, as the biggest producer is known, is “discouraged by the turn of events,” chief executive Chris Griffith said March 5.

“We are hopeful though that AMCU will come to recognise and appreciate the realities of the company’s position and will work toward a solution that will benefit its members.”

Impala declined for the first time in five days in Johannesburg, losing 0.3 percent to 116.62 rand.

Amplats dropped 1.5 percent to 450.01 rand.

Lonmin lost 0.9 percent to 300.8 pence in London.

A Johannesburg court yesterday dismissed an application to hold the AMCU and its leaders in contempt for allegedly ignoring a January order that the union’s leaders prevent violence during the strike.

 

Fine Line

 

Amplats brought the application after an AMCU official was killed in clashes with police and two others were arrested for the attempted murder of a company employee last month.

“It would be naive to think that in the context of industrial action, parties do not resort to litigation as a means to an end,” Judge Andre van Niekerk said in an e-mailed copy of his judgment.

“There is a fine line between seeking tactical advantage through litigation and abuse of process, but it is a line that parties ought to respect.”

The National Union of Mineworkers, which is not on strike, said another one of its members was attacked early yesterday on his way to Amplats’ Union mine. - Bloomberg News

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