ReutersAfrica2.png

 

 

Workers flee to safe houses on South Africa's strike-hit platinum belt

 

 

Ed Stoddard and Nomatter Ndebele, Reuters Africa, Rustenburg, South Africa,
22 May 2014

 

The chanting began around midnight, a chilling message through the cold of
the early South African winter to those who had dared to cross the picket
lines at platinum producer Lonmin.

 

"The rats must come out of their holes. We are going to kill this NUM," the
crowd chanted as it approached the home of 'Mary', a member of the National
Union of Mineworkers (NUM) who had kept working at Lonmin when the rival
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU) was on strike.

 

Her real name cannot be revealed because she fears for her life.

 

"I heard singing in the distance. I thought I was actually dreaming, but it
was getting nearer and nearer," said Mary, who spoke to Reuters at an
undisclosed location.

 

The events she related unfolded outside her home near Lonmin's Marikana mine
on May 14, which the London-listed company had declared a "return to work
day" in the hope of persuading enough people to end the crippling AMCU
strike.

 

The 17-week stoppage, which has also hit Anglo American Platinum and Impala
Platinum, did not end that night; AMCU members blocked roads, extending the
longest and costliest industrial action in South African mining history.

 

Fear is proving a potent weapon for the AMCU as it holds out for wage
increases that the mining houses say they cannot afford.

 

Four NUM members were hacked or beaten to death in the run-up to May 14, and
when Mary overheard someone at work - an AMCU "spy", she feared - muttering
"we must remove her head", she thought she could be next.

 

A fifth NUM member was stabbed to death on his way to work at an Anglo
American Platinum mine on Thursday.

 

TRAUMATISED CHILDREN

 

When the crowd of 50 men in green AMCU t-shirts gathered at the end of her
street - most carrying clubs, others scythes - they chanted the names of NUM
members.

 

"I live in a circle, like a dead-end street. They stood there and they
started humming and saying that the rats must come out," Mary said, still
shaken as she recalled the moment her three daughters, the eldest 13, awoke
to the noise.

 

"Then they started pointing at the houses because most of us NUM people live
in that street. I've got three children. They were all at home, and they
were traumatised."

 

Mary's husband was also there, but he is a mine supervisor and not an NUM
member, giving him some degree of cover. "I'm the one who's a target because
I am an NUM member," Mary said, still wearing blue overalls after a day
shift.

 

Eventually the crowd drifted away to join a larger group marching around the
mine in their bid to prevent workers breaking the strike, but not before its
message had sunk in.

 

NUM sources say the union now has 15 members living in safe houses around
the platinum belt town of Rustenburg, 120 kilometres (70 miles) northwest of
Johannesburg. They go to work under the protection of private security
guards.

 

TURF WAR, CLASS WAR

 

AMCU denies it uses violence and intimidation, and police have made no
arrests in connection with the five recent murders, but on May 14 thousands
of AMCU members stopped others from returning to Lonmin's shafts.

 

Reuters journalists at AMCU rallies in Marikana have also routinely heard
members chanting "What is this NUM? We must kill this NUM."

 

At such gatherings, AMCU members often greet the media with hostile stares
or refuse to speak to reporters.

 

AMCU emerged as the biggest platinum union in 2012 after poaching tens of
thousands of NUM members in a turf war in which dozens of people were
killed.

 

It, too, has lost members, not least when police gunned down 34 wildcat
strikers at Marikana in August 2012, the bloodiest security incident since
the end of apartheid in 1994.

 

Since then, NUM says 46 of its members have been murdered, and even though
40 arrests have been made, police have secured no convictions, and suspects
accused of violence have often been released on bail, General Secretary
Frans Baleni said.

 

"We have seen cases where the police do not act, and if they do act, the
justice department fails and people get bail," he told Reuters.

 

A police spokesman said they knew the ring leaders behind the latest wave of
intimidation but have made no arrests. He did not explain why.

 

AMCU leaders have tapped a deep vein of discontent among black miners who
feel they are still not getting a fair share of South Africa's mineral
wealth, making its fight an extension of the struggle against the continuing
inequalities that are a legacy of apartheid.

 

Its charismatic president, Joseph Mathunjwa, frequently portrays the strike
as an all-out battle against injustice, the "platinum cabal" and the
"capitalists". Strike-breakers such as Mary are painted as sell-outs to the
forces of oppression.

 

"Even though I am in a safe house now, I still get nightmares. I'm on
sleeping pills and anti-depressants. I get anxiety attacks," she said,
adding she may be forced to quit and move back to her native Eastern Cape.

 

Although she said she loved her job, it was not something she was prepared
to die for.

 

"I love my kids more. I love my life more." (Editing by Ed Cropley and Will
Waterman)

 

 

From: http://www.trust.org/item/20140522121841-u944z/

 

 

 

 

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