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National miners strike in South Africa
By Barry Mason
7 December 2007
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Miners belonging to the 250,000-strong South African National
Union of Miners (NUM) took one-day strike action on Tuesday, December
4. The strike, the first national walkout by miners since the
bringing down of the apartheid regime, was over the countrys
appalling safety record. So far this year, over 200 miners have
died at work as a result of accidents, exceeding last years
total of 199.
Over the last few days there have been fatal accidents at the
Anglo Platinum and Xstrata mines near Rustenburg and a miner was
found dead at the Gold Fields Kloof mine near Carletonville.
In October, around 3,000 miners at Elandsrand were trapped
1.5 kilometres underground for more than 24 hours when the power
cable of the lift cage was damaged. They were eventually rescued
unharmed.
Over 40,000 miners attended a rally in Johannesburg on Tuesday.
An AFP report quoted Thembisile Marrent, a miner at the Kloof
goldmine in Mpumalnga province, who said, We are dying in
mines but get nothing. We want change, we want to work safe. When
you get accidents the boss wants to know if it was bad luck. If
the mistake is yours, they charge you [with disciplinary offences]
even though you are in hospital.
The miners carried placards whose slogans included, Mine
safety is a human right and Blood-dripped profit is
the bosses luxury.
Lesiba Sheshoka, an NUM spokesman, said, Those who own
the mines are chasing profits at the expense of peoples
lives. We are losing mine workers on an almost daily basis. This
is because of pure negligence.
The march in Johannesburg was to the Chamber of Mines headquarters,
where a petition was handed in. Amongst the demands was a call
for the prosecution of negligent managers. The petition noted
that there had not even been a charge of negligence since the
year 2000.
In 2003, the mining companies said they would work to reduce
the fatality levels to those of Western developed countries, and
whilst in 2004 the number of deaths did go down, it has continued
to rise ever since.
South African mines are amongst the deepest and most labour-intensive
in the world. Amongst the minerals mined are precious metals such
as gold and platinum, of which South Africa is a major producer.
The current high price being fetched for gold means the mining
companies are pushing for increased production.
Mining accounts for 7 percent of the countrys gross domestic
product and is the highest foreign exchange source. Mining exports
in 2006 amounted to R355 billion ($52 billion). Platinum prices
on the worlds stock exchanges peaked as a result of nervous
reaction to the miners one-day action.
After the Elandsrand case, the ANC government ordered a safety
review of all mines, but no time limit was stipulated. The government
is committed to free-market policies and has no intention of challenging
the profits being made by the mining bosses. Whilst the NUM called
the one-day strike, it does not seriously challenge the ANC government
and has agreed to the destruction of tens of thousands of jobs
in the mining industry since the end of apartheid. The NUM is
a key union in the COSATU federation, which remains in coalition
partnership with the ANC.
The miners action is an expression of a broader combativeness
amongst workers in South Africa in recent months, reflecting the
growing disillusionment with the ANC government. About 40 percent
of the population are unemployed, and over half are living below
the poverty line, whilst a small black elite has enriched itself.
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