Zuma should have defended Mantashe: Numsa

 President Jacob Zuma should have defended ANC secretary-general Gwede
Mantashe against calls for his removal by ANCYL leader Julius Malema, the
National Union of Metalworkers of SA (Numsa) said on Thursday.

"Why did the president keep quiet when his party's secretary-general was
being attacked?" said Numsa general secretary Irvin Jim in Johannesburg.

He said Zuma should have reprimanded Malema for his "misbehaviour".

Malema wanted Mantashe replaced by Deputy Minister of Police Fikile Mbalula,
Jim said.

"The ANC is not run by tsotsis who would sit in shebeens and decided to put
their friends as leaders. Mantashe is being eaten alive and Malema should
have been reprimanded," said Jim.

He said Mantashe was being targeted because he was a communist.

"Numsa rejects the premature call to unseat Mantashe now or (at the ANC's
elective conference) in 2012," he said, adding that Malema had taken an
anti-Congress of SA Trade Unions and anti-SA Communist Party posture.

"This unprovoked stance against the working class is deliberately generated
by individuals who disapprove of the good working relations within the
tripartite alliance that emerged in the Polokwane," he said referring to the
2007 ANC conference.

"They believe communists are not entitled to being in the ANC," said Jim.

Malema would have to work very hard to remove Mantashe because Numsa would
oppose him and anyone else who made that call, Jim said.

"We will defend the ANC against these unscrupulous individuals who are only
interested in their wealth and tenders." Jim criticised Zuma's state of the
nation address, saying Numsa's national executive committee had discussed it
and found it "uninspiring" and "empty".

"Zuma failed to respond to the glaring serious and worsening socio-economic
conditions confronting the working class.

"It has also failed to give clear vision and command to state institutions,
and to galvanise the people behind the programme of action as laid out in
Polokwane," said Jim.

Zuma's address lacked commitment to promote decent work through procurement
practices that could champion "localisation" and he failed to act against
labour broking, said Jim.

He said Numsa would not keep quiet when Polokwane resolutions were not being
implemented just because it had supported Zuma for president.

On Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan's Budget speech, Jim said it was
anti-poor and anti-working class.

"The budget became a platform to take forward the neo-liberal macro-economic
framework (Gear).

"What we have resisted in the past 15 years is now worse because Gear
[growth, employment and redistribution] has been put on a faster gear now,"
he said.

He said Numsa was disappointed that Gordhan maintained the same policies
that had destroyed the country's opportunity to develop.

"This is not surprising because the Treasury staff belong to the old order
that resisted change," said Jim, adding that the union would persuade Cosatu
to call for inflation targeting to be dropped. - Sapa

Published on the web by Business Report on February 18, 2010.
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© Business Report 2010. All rights reserved.

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