Morning Star.png

 

 

South Africa:

 

Coalminers Vow to Defend Jobs at Optimum Mine

 

 

James Tweedie, The Morning Star, London, 3 February 2016

 

South African coalminers vowed yesterday to defend jobs at a pit that is the
subject of a row between the well-connected Gupta family and the world’s
biggest mining firm.

 

The controversy between the Indian family, Swiss giant Glencore, national
electricity supplier Eskom and the African National Congress (ANC)
government surfaced in newspaper reports at the weekend.

 

Yesterday the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) objected to the publishing
of its comments made to the weekend “lekgotla” (assembly) of the ANC, South
African Communist Party and trade union federation COSATU, which comprise
the tripartite alliance.

 

Communist deputy general secretary Solly Mapaila went public after telling
the meeting that the Guptas — rumoured to wield great influence over
President Jacob Zuma — were the “elephant in the room.”

 

The allegations stem from a trip to Zurich that Mineral Resources Minister
Mosobenzi Zwane made in December to meet Glencore chief executive Ivan
Glasenberg — at the same time as a private jet belonging to the Gupta family
was seen at the airport.

 

Optimum

 

Following that meeting, Glencore sold the Optimum coalmine in Mpumalanga
province to Tegeta Exploration and Resources, in which the Guptas have a
stake.

 

Glencore later complained that it had been forced to sell the mine after
Eskom fined it for failing to supply coal in sufficient quantity and of
acceptable quality, driving the already unprofitable operation to the wall.

 

Mr Zwane then invoked legislation forcing the sale, but a three billion rand
(£130 million) bid by a black-owned company favoured by the NUM was rejected
in favour of a two billion rand (£85m) offer from Tegeta.

 

NUM president Piet Matosa reportedly complained to the lekgotla that Mr
Zwane had not consulted the union before his trip.

 

NUM spokesman Livhuwani Mammburu said the union’s prime concern was the
threat to thousands of jobs at the neighbouring Exxaro Arnot coalmine in
Mpumalanga after Eskom did not renew its contract at the end of last year.

 

“We are not defending or speaking on behalf of the individual mining
companies affected,” he said.

 

Mr Zwane insisted on Monday that he had acted to save jobs at Optimum.

 

The Gupta family own the New Age, the only South African newspaper that
supports the ANC, and have also been buying stakes in British power
stations, steel mills and other engineering firms in recent months.

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-882d-South-Africa-Coalminers-vow-to-de
fend-jobs-at-Optimum-mine#.VrF4S7J9600>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-882d-South-Africa-Coalminers-vow-to-def
end-jobs-at-Optimum-mine#.VrF4S7J9600

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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