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No improved productivity with ongoing killings – NUM

6th September 2013

By: Martin Creamer

Creamer Media Editor

  

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Vital productivity improvements would elude South Africa’s mining industry for as long as mineworkers were killed because of their union affiliation and lawlessness was allowed to prevail, National Union of Mineworkers president Senzeni Zokwana said last week.

In an address to the second yearly Mining Lekgotla, Zokwana said that the killing of its members was going unpunished and the union would not be able to respond positively to repeated management requests for greater productivity while their members faced threats in their places of residence.

“Productivity will not improve if workers go underground not sure whether they will still be alive the next day,” Zokwana said.

The Marikana Commission of Inquiry and the declaration of people as possible witnesses had left the justice system in abeyance and given them confidence to perpetrate other forms of recklessness in the troubled platinum belt.

As a result of the ongoing instability, foreign investors were avoiding South Africa as an investment destination and he would do the same if he were in their shoes.

“If I were sitting in Canada and deciding where to invest money, I don’t think I would choose this country,” he added.

However, if all unions were compelled to work within the legal framework, the country would have a future as an invest- ment destination and mineworkers would be better able to improve productivity.

The NUM had a tradition of sticking to its agreements no matter how painful they might turn out to be.

There should not be one rule for one union and another rule for others, he said.

With steps being taken to introduce greater mechanisation, new technologies and auto- mation, further education and training colleges should be used to ensure that mineworkers had skills that would make them employable in other sectors.

The NUM believed in the local benefi- ciation of local minerals and metals because it increased local consumption and lessened reliance on other markets, which would help to shield the country in times of low commodity prices and currency constraints.

The NUM was committed to refraining from recklessness during its wage negotiations, it did not demonstrate with assegais and spears and made a point of not wrecking mine plant and equipment.

“We are committed to help build the future of the mining industry,” Zokwana said.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Magazine Managing Editor

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