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NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION

Cosatu calls on workers to strike against ‘crippling economic crisis’

South Africa’s largest trade union federation, Cosatu, has called on all non-essential workers to strike on Monday, 7 October, in a National Day of Action against the ‘crippling economic crisis’ in the country.
Tamsin-Cosatu-protest main2 Cosatu has called for a National Day of Action on Monday, 7 October. (Photo: Frennie Shivambu / Gallo Images)

Cosatu has called for non-essential workers to “come out in their numbers” on Monday, 7 October as part of a National Day of Action against the “crippling economic crisis” in South Africa, which it says is characterised by joblessness, poverty and inequality.

The trade union federation will be joined by affiliated trade unions, including the South African Clothing and Textile Workers Union (Sactwu) and the South African Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers Union (Saccawu).

Cosatu has stated that its primary grievance is South Africa’s high unemployment rate, with 11.3 million people in need of jobs.

“Given this very high unemployment rate, Cosatu is actually demanding a moratorium on retrenchments because it doesn’t make sense to say we have this high unemployment rate and then we are still cutting the little jobs that we have,” said Zanele Sabela, Cosatu’s national spokesperson.

Sabela referenced the large-scale retrenchments that had taken place at the SA Post Office and metals group Sibanye Stillwater this year.

Read more: Employees, communities brace for worst as SA Post Office on brink of liquidation

“The latest company to announce that it is going to be cutting jobs is Seriti, the mining company, and they’re talking about more than 1,100 jobs,” said Sabela, adding that Saccawu was in the process of engaging with Pick n Pay over the retailer’s plans to retrench thousands of workers.

Read more: Pick n Pay shakes up model, focuses on future to counter R3.2bn loss

“When you consider that … one job actually supports on average seven people, you can imagine the many people that will be devastated when these retrenchments do come through,” she said.

Cosatu noted that an “ever-escalating” cost of living meant that poor and working-class communities were struggling to feed their families.

“To add insult to injury, Eskom has proposed an electricity tariff hike of more than 36% for 2025, on the back of a 12.5% rise this year. If the National Energy Regulator of SA grants it, inflation will spike, prompting the Reserve Bank to once again hike up the repo rate, ultimately arresting economic growth. Workers have had enough,” said Cosatu.

It said it wanted the government to do away with adherence to austerity measures, especially now that “budget cuts are threatening the quality of education of our children”.

Read more:

What will happen on Monday?

Cosatu is planning a national strike, with protest marches across the country. Sabela said that in Johannesburg, workers would meet at George Lea Park in Sandton before marching to the JSE, where they would hand over a memorandum to representatives of Business Unity South Africa (Busa), Discovery, the National Department of Employment and Labour, the National Treasury and the SA Reserve Bank.

In Cape Town, there will be a march to the provincial legislature and national Parliament, while in KwaZulu-Natal, workers will march to the Durban City Hall.

Sabela said it was difficult to predict how many workers would participate.

The strike will be in compliance with section 77 of the Labour Relations Act, which means employees who participate will have legal protection from disciplinary action.

“If workers come back on a Tuesday and they have problems [with their employers], they will have to get in touch with us or get hold of their union, if they have one. The CCMA [Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration] will also help with this, and so will the Department of Labour,” said Sabela.

According to the Labour Relations Act, a person cannot strike if they are an essential worker, meaning those individuals whose jobs are considered critical to the “life, personal safety, or health of the whole or any part of the population”. This includes healthcare workers and the police.

Will this make a difference?

Busa released a statement expressing concern over the planned nationwide protest, saying it did not believe the strike would address any of the challenges Cosatu was raising.

“We respect the right to strike or protest, within the dictates of law, but believe the issues raised by Cosatu are structural in nature and can be addressed through the various bilateral and multilateral processes, engagements and partnerships under way,” said Busa.

Busa CEO Cas Coovadia said that at a time when the economy was under “severe strain”, such protests only added further pressure, rather than contributing to efforts to achieve sustainable economic recovery.

“We need to prioritise stability and collaboration to foster long-term economic growth, rather than resorting to measures that negatively impact both businesses and citizens,” he said.

Busa reiterated a proposal to revise section 77 of the Labour Relations Act to limit the time between National Economic Development and Labour Council (Nedlac) certificates and protests to 12 months, to ensure that labour actions were “relevant, current and justified”. Nedlac issues certificates for socioeconomic protests to be protected.

Sabela argued that Cosatu was allowing workers to raise their voices and identify the issues they believed the country needed to focus on.

“[The National Day of Action] is to raise our concerns, because policy is a political choice. And so, if we raise our voices to say these are the things that we are unhappy about, we make our voices heard so that we can feed into the policy,” she said. DM

Comments

Sihle Sigwebela Oct 6, 2024, 10:26 PM

I think it very important for labour unions to strike, not only to air grievances (which government don't often appreciate), but also to protect the role of organised labour in the country as a whole.

onceoffaddre Oct 7, 2024, 07:45 AM

Is that more or less important than them, the COSATUs of the world, just creating the jobs? This strike says one thing: "Feed us, or else". A truly independent people with the ability to fend for themselves would start businesses and create the jobs and compete not cripple employers.

megapode Oct 8, 2024, 10:04 AM

Unions are not meant to create jobs and cannot. They are there to protect their members. I don't always agree with strikes (always over issues in which I am univolved) but workers should have the right to organise and to wield the one weapon they have.

Shaun Slayer Oct 7, 2024, 08:32 AM

SA workers. If you can't google an answer to your problem, strike. Who cares if we cripple the company. We will strike again when they close. :-)

Malcolm McManus Oct 7, 2024, 08:55 AM

So help me understand this. Cosatu, in its quest to create jobs, will punish and weaken, if not destroy some jobs, by crippling industries who do employ people. The words I have to describe this imbecile Cosatu logic would definitely be moderated.

megapode Oct 8, 2024, 10:06 AM

COSATU are not out to create jobs. That's not their role. They are out to preserve jobs. What they are saying is that unemployment is very high, retrenchment will only make things worse.

louw.nic Oct 7, 2024, 09:41 AM

2 questions: 1. why is it important? 2. what does it achieve? 3. for bonus marks, what is the unemployment rate?

laurantsystems Oct 7, 2024, 09:43 AM

Striking against an economic crisis is as idiotic as smoking cigarettes to cure lung cancer.

Graeme Oct 7, 2024, 10:18 AM

That truly is an inane comment.

D'Esprit Dan Oct 7, 2024, 11:01 AM

We have an economic crisis.... so let's strike and create more job losses. SA's unions are ruled by a luddite elite who care not one jot for either workers or the unemployed, just their fatcat perks. Look at the COJ workers being fleeced by finance companies - which the union bigwigs organised.

D'Esprit Dan Oct 7, 2024, 11:05 AM

Our economy is in the toilet because of the tripartite alliance that COSATU is a central pillar of. Where was COSATU when State Capture destroyed our economy? They were cheering on Zuma! Hypocrites.

Michael Thomlinson Oct 7, 2024, 01:29 PM

Warped logic I'm afraid, Sihle. Unions should be negotiating with business. Strikes hurt the industry and the workers they are supposed to be protecting. Cosatu logic: Businesses retrench to increase profits. Wrong! Businesses retrench to survive downturns in a stumbling economy, as a last resort.

Confucious Says Oct 7, 2024, 02:10 PM

It is far more important to work!

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Oct 6, 2024, 10:57 PM

There's no money so lets stop work to get some... I dont need a crystal ball to know unions are destroying what little hope our workers have. I smell vested interests.

B M Oct 7, 2024, 09:55 PM

Yes, the irrationality of this strike must be derived from a politician (union boss) flexing. Absurd really.

Oct 7, 2024, 07:47 AM

It's not going to solve anything.

BOB Rernard Oct 7, 2024, 08:06 AM

This "greater" situation, lack of quality jobs result from our poor economy which in turn is a result of poor management & governance at the highest levels. Poor choices at the polls have resulted in impoverishment of everyone...except politicians.

potwanaf Oct 7, 2024, 08:09 AM

It's amazing that those who sleep with the same blanket and the ANC instead of providing professional guidance they embark in actions that lack wisdom and integrity. We must start a movement to liberate our people from oppression and corruption. A society behind as departments are dysfunctional.

Robvz Oct 7, 2024, 08:26 AM

Unions function as labor cartels. A labor cartel restricts the number of workers in a company or industry to drive up the remaining workers' wages, Economic research finds that unions benefit their members but hurt consumers generally, and especially workers who are denied job opportunities.

Robvz Oct 7, 2024, 08:34 AM

Unions protect wages and jobs of their members, and are anti-competitive and actively against new job entrants. Striking about the lack of jobs is cynical politics. The best thing COSATU and other unions can do for job creation is to cease to exist.

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Oct 7, 2024, 08:38 AM

Unemployment is a tragedy. The DA has one main priority in GNU: CREATE JOBS. And I can promise the DA are more likely to bring our workers prosperity than the unions, which will in my view ultimately completely destroy workers lives with their vested interests and short sighted approach.

Malcolm McManus Oct 7, 2024, 08:59 AM

Yebo, the ANC and Cosatu have jointly helped stagnate our economy and employment chances for their own power and entitlement.

BillyBumhe Oct 7, 2024, 09:34 AM

To paraphrase the hippies, striking for jobs is like making love for virginity.

matth Oct 7, 2024, 04:21 PM

Best comment of the week!

Barry Messenger Oct 7, 2024, 09:53 AM

Einstein's popular definition of insanity applies. Forget the placard-carrying T-shirted masses, it's Cosatu's leadership that needs a kick in the pants for calling this strike.

Oct 7, 2024, 10:16 AM

Eskom employs 47,000 workers at an average wage of R76,000 per month. In 2014 Eskom had 32,000 workers producing more power than today's staff at lower wages. Thank you Cosatu and other labour unions. This is the sort of action that stops the private sector from hiring workers at minimum wages.

batting 101 Captain Oct 7, 2024, 10:25 AM

One cannot for crying out aloud think that a Union offers job opportunities??? The communistic thugs who brain wash the beggars are nothing but pure thieves and hypocrites. The begging bowl just gets deeper by the day.. thanks to the idiots ..

cs0834815071 Oct 7, 2024, 10:33 AM

Beautiful!!! Then we are all jobless, penniless, poor and miserable while the trade union leaders bask in abundance

R S Oct 7, 2024, 10:47 AM

This strike is a mere gesture from the union to show their workers "here's why you pay us membership fees". It won't stop any of these job losses since many of these companies or govt institutions have to restructure just to survive.

D'Esprit Dan Oct 7, 2024, 10:57 AM

As the old saying goes, striking against job losses is like f_ck!ng for virginity.

William Dryden Oct 7, 2024, 11:48 AM

Yes Cosatu are striking for more jobs because their funding pot of workers is dwindling and they are not getting enough money in their piggy bank to live the high life. The more people employed the grater the returns for the unions, and that's all they are concerned about.

Harold Porter Oct 7, 2024, 12:00 PM

COSATU: “We are going to try to cripple the economy on 7th October in order to protest the crippling of the economy”

Sheila Vrahimis Oct 7, 2024, 01:01 PM

throwing oil on a fire to extinguish it

Lian van den Heever Oct 7, 2024, 02:22 PM

I agree. The planned strikes because of the poor economic climate sounds strange . Should Cosatu members not do some introspection and think what they could DO to improve the situation, e.g. declaring less wildcat strikes, etc.

matth Oct 7, 2024, 11:52 PM

Waiting patiently for the day that Cosatu announces a national day of working harder to fight joblessness and the faltering economy, or better yet, advising workers to vote for pro-business parties.

nf_rossouw Oct 8, 2024, 07:59 AM

Witnessed firsthand the aftermath of the protest, which included discarded posters and banners, as well as various other forms of litter strewn across Maude Street. Best off all...Cosato members passed out on the sidewalk next to empty beer bottles. The economic crisis is crippling indeed...