Sunday Independent.png

 

 

SADTU leader decries 'business unionism'

 

 

Shanti Aboobaker, Sunday Independent, Johannesburg, 25 May 2014

 

A senior trade union leader has hit out at the rise of "business unionism"
in the country's labour movement, after two COSATU unions this week
dismissed their senior leaders for alleged corruption. 

 

SA Democratic Teachers Union general secretary Mugwena Maluleke said the
cosy relationship between trade union leaders and business was weakening
unions.

 

He was speaking to The Sunday Independent in the wake of SADTU's decision
earlier this week to dismiss its president, Thobile Ntola, over at least
seven charges of corruption.

 

Among the most serious charges is that Ntola received monthly payments from
the union's service providers, and even lives in a house worth R3.5 million
bought specially for him by one such provider.

 

Ntola has not denied the substance of the charges, but has said that the
circumstances leading to the gifts differed from SADTU's version of events.

 

"The challenge facing all trade unions is business unionism. It is the worst
enemy of the workers. Unions will be split and weakened from unions doing
business." Maluleke said.

 

"Unions should not be involved in business at all. You can't be a
Marxist-Leninist trade union without (at least) a separation between the
union and the investment arms."

 

He lamented the close relationship some union leaders had with business
people.

 

These relationships had been extended to the families of union leaders,
implicating even a COSATU leader, whose wife allegedly took payments to
market financial products to union members.

 

This week the Chemical, Energy, Paper, Printing, Wood and Allied Workers
Union suspended its General Secretary, Simon Mofokeng, its president,
Thamsanqa Mhlongo, and its deputy presidents, Eunice Dlodlo and Lucas
Mashego.

 

Maluleke was scathing in his analysis.

 

"My opinion as an individual is that business unionism will weaken the
unions.

 

"People will focus on the profits, making deals, and people will want
particular leaders leading (a union)," he told The Sunday Independent. 

 

He vowed SADTU would not stop the investigation into Ntola. 

 

"There is Hot Chili, a company that forced members to pay to attend meetings
in Bloemfontein - that's how dirty the whole thing is. This is why we can't
stop investigating," he said.

 

But SADTU has an even bigger crisis on its hands, after President Jacob Zuma
initiated a commission of inquiry into allegations principals and union
officials were selling cushy government posts for cash.

 

"On the cash-for-jobs issue, we are taking it very seriously. But this is
about individuals. It's a culture we need to root out, but it's a culture
influenced by business," he said.

 

While he was not apportioning all blame to the private sector, Maluleke said
the culture of capitalism was of "making money", and that this culture had
crept into the teaching profession.

 

"But you cannot accept a culture of selling posts."

 

He said teachers were being exploited by principals, because teachers worked
under "poor conditions," while Principals were powerful and earned better
salaries.

 

"The integrity of the profession in totality is taking a knock because of
corruption, and therefore we must all of us work together."

 

Meanwhile, the COSATU Central Executive Committee is due to meet tomorrow.

 

Corruption in the federation will take centre stage with the tabling of the
Sizwe Ntsaluba Gobodo report.

 

Charles Nupen and Petrus Mashishi's long-awaited report into the
organizational problems facing the federation will also be tabled.

 

 

Transcribed

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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