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WSWS : News
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Africa
Sacked South African Volkswagen workers appeal for international
support
By our correspondent
17 February 2000
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this version to print
In his recent State of the Nation speech, South African
President Thabo Mbeki attacked the 1,300 striking Volkswagen (VW)
autoworkers. The strikers, employed at the company's factory in
Uitenhage, near Port Elizabeth, were defending 13 democratically
elected shop stewards who had been suspended from office by their
union, the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA).
The union has collaborated throughout with VW management, who
said they would sack the striking workers for refusing to attend
work when instructed. Mbeki backed VW's action and said that the
ANC government also would not be "held hostage by elements
pursuing selfish and anti-social purposes".
The World Socialist Web Site has received material
from the Uitenhage Crisis Committee (UCC) which represents the
sacked VW workers, explaining the background to the sackings and
calling on workers internationally to support their struggle against
the NUMSA leadership.
UCC explain that a new layer of 13 militant shop stewards
was elected at the VW plant in March 1999. NUMSA leaders immediately
set about trying to remove them, including taking them to the
Labour Court. The stewards were suspended when a 2,000-strong
mass meeting voted not to attend a quarterly general meeting on
January 17 after hearing that the company's director would not
be present. The general meetings are events through which the
VW management seeks to instil in the workforce the need to improve
company performance. Workers asked that they be able to continue
working, instead of attending the meeting, but management refused.
It was at this poorly attended general meeting, with the 13 stewards
also not present, that NUMSA officials, including union President
Mtutuzeli Tom, voted to suspend the stewards.
The next day, the Sheriff of the Court and VW management
presented the 13 with notice of their immediate suspension as
shop stewards. On Thursday, January 20 workers gathered outside
the factory gates in support of the stewards. Union officials
refused to turn up to negotiate on behalf of the men, but held
a meeting with VW management that evening and signed an agreement
that the shop stewards were suspended. Disciplinary hearings were
planned for Monday, January 24, when work should recommence and
individual workers should sign a form committing themselves not
to disobey management instructions. As most workers at the plant
were now not working they only learnt of this agreement through
the press.
The UCC's statement explains:
Over the weekend, a crisis committee was set up of delegates
of various factories in Uitenhage to carry forward this struggle.
The chairperson, Mxolisi Ndandani, was also chosen as the spokesperson.
On Monday morning, January 24, he made a call for independent
mediation, even if need be from the provincial government. No
one came, even up to now. On that same day, the company illegally
locked out the workers. At the same time, the NUMSA leadership
issued a condemnation of their own locked-out members. They used
workers' money to try and kick out democratically elected shop
stewards, but when it came to opposing the illegal lockout, they
sat by with arms folded. This shows the collusion of VWSA management
with the NUMSA leadership. The press were biased and played up
the story of a handful of 350 strikers and on Wednesday, 26.1.2000,
during the lockout, the VWSA management suspended the 350 workers.
It is clear that among these 350 names, the management had identified
militant workers that have been a thorn in their flesh for some
time.
By Friday, January 28, the NUMSA officials again made an agreement
with the VW management that work would restart on the Monday,
January 31, and that the disciplinary hearing for these 350 would
start on that same day. The NUMSA officials even volunteered to
represent these workers. By shifting focus to the defence of the
350, it was easier for the NUMSA officials to keep to their position
that the 13 remained suspended. They were helped by the VWSA management,
who from the start banned the shop stewards from calling meetings
on the plant. When workers realised that the VWSA management were
working hand in glove with the NUMSA leadership, this hardened
their position and determination to stand together.
Although from Monday, January 31 some workers had gone back
to work, for the whole week up to February 4 there was no production
at the plant.
On Tuesday, February 1, at 3.27 p.m., COSATU issued a statement
on behalf of one of the NUMSA officials who was leading the attack
on the 13.
We quote it in full: COSATU General Secretary, Zwelinzima
Vavi will address a NUMSA General Meeting at Barks Madlakane Hall,
Kwanobuhle Uitenhage this afternoon at 5PM. The meeting has been
called by NUMSA to address the illegal strike at the Volkswagen
plant in Uitenhage. Vavi will urge all NUMSA members to go back
to work and distance themselves from agent provocateurs bent on
disturbing production at the plant.
This shows that even before the COSATU general secretary came
to the Eastern Cape, before he even heard the information firsthand,
his mind was made up.
This point emphasises the call by the Uitenhage workers crisis
committee that the mediation has to be from an independent source
in which they have confidence. We still make this call, as we
have done since the very beginning.
The VWSA management position to give the workers an ultimatum
to return by Thursday, February 3 or be dismissed shows to what
extent they were prepared to go in order to support the NUMSA
leadership's plan to get rid of the 13 shop stewards. The ultimatum
was an attempt to divide workers and intimidate them into abandoning
the 13 and whomever else refused to return without them. Indeed
on Friday morning, 1,300 workers were dismissed and a further
300 are still on suspension, also facing dismissal. The need for
solidarity now is critical.
To all NUMSA members we say: don't allow the leadership to
victimise the fighters at VWSAtoday it is us, tomorrow it
will be you! To all COSATU members, an injury to one is an injury
to all! To the VW workers across the world, we together produce
the wealth of the companylet us stand togethertoday
it is us, tomorrow who knows who will be next? To all workers
everywhere, we need your support now!
A working class united will never be defeated!
WM Ndandani
Chairperson Uitenhage Crisis Committee
Tel. + 27 [41] 082 626 5298
Fax: + 27 [41] 922 8691
Temporary e-mail: wivl@sn.apc.org
See Also:
President Mbeki threatens South African
workers
[9 February 2000]
South Africa
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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