COSATU no letters, white background.jpg

 

COSATU Press Statement, 4 February 2016

 

 

COSATU Special CEC statement

 

 

The Congress of South African Trade Unions convened a one day Special
Central Executive Committee meeting yesterday, to discuss the Taxation Law
Amendment Act. The meeting also reflected on the Border Management Agency
and a briefing on the recent leaked interim Basic Education Ministerial Task
Team Report.

 

The SCEC took place at a time when the economy is shedding jobs across all
sectors and the level of real unemployment has reached an alarming rate of
35%. The deepening levels of poverty are exacerbated by the emergence and an
increase in the rate of the working poor, where more that 60% of workers are
earning less than R5000. The rate of exploitation is increasing with big
business consolidating their profit maximisation manoeuvres at the expense
of the working class. The rate of precarious employment is reflective of the
growing levels of exploitation.

The meeting also took place in the context of sharpening class
contradictions that have coincided with the increasing control of the South
African economy by international monopoly capital. The economic downturn,
which comes with capitalist manoeuvres and the incoherence of our
revolutionary alliance, has reinforced the power of the domestic
counter-revolutionary forces.

The recent SAB Miller /AB Inbev merger, the arrogance and boldness of the
Free Market Foundation and the big business's approach or reluctance to take
seriously the discussions on the minimum wage are clear signs that capital
is emboldened. Big Business is putting a spanner on the wheel, with regard
to the processes that are meant to finalise an agreement for the legislated
national minimum wage. We will be heightening our campaign against the Free
Market Foundation and their attempt to undermine workers rights. We are also
mobilising against the Eskom electricity tariff hike application.

There is an obvious class polarisation taking place in our society and
unfortunately it is also finding expression within our movement and it is
increasingly becoming the dividing political line. Whilst we have seen the
convergence within the ANC-led Alliance, on the national content of the
national democratic revolution, including consensus on the radical phase of
our transition, there is however a chasm on the policy content, which is
being driven by the state. Government is clearly undermining this consensus
in practice. There are too many policies that are being pursued by the state
whose content is meant to hollow out and erode the hard-won rights of the
workers.

It is also patently obvious that some of these developments are a reflection
of the weaknesses in the organisational power of the working class. This
weakness has emboldened the class enemies and they feel confident that they
can unleash an offensive against COSATU without repercussions. We have no
illusions about our weakness but neither must our class enemies and
detractors be overconfident and exaggerate their strength.

We want to make it very clear that this offensive will receive an equal
response from the workers and all the progressive forces. We want to see all
the progressive resolutions and policies that have been adopted by the
Alliance and the 52nd Polokwane ANC Conference and the 53rd Mangaung ANC
conference implemented.

 

The SCEC therefore located this unilateral enactment of this law by
government, without a Comprehensive Social Security paper, as not only the
provocation of workers but as the worrying rejection and an abandonment of
Alliance and ANC positions by government. The subject of the release of the
Comprehensive Social Security paper is a decision of several Alliance
summits and numerous ANC conferences and NGC's.The meeting also
characterized the desertion and deliberate ignoring of the government
commissioned Taylor Commission report, and its recommendations as wasteful
expenditure. Government cannot ignore or allow the recommendations of this
paid for commission to gather dust.

 

The SCEC reiterated its rejection of this law and called for it to be
scrapped. The meeting rejected the myth that workers do not want to save but
pointed out that they do not earn enough to save. It also reminded
government that workers all around the country participate in stokvels and
savings scheme every day, to try and save from their meagre wages and all
they need are incentives not a patronizing law.

 

The meeting expressed concern that NEDLAC is being made redundant and
undermined and also that parliamentarians are sleeping at the wheel. They
should have insisted on a NEDLAC report first before passing the law. The
NEDLAC Act has been abandoned by both parliament and cabinet and the
parliamentarians must know they are the custodians of the NEDLAC Act. COSATU
therefore shall wage a serious battle to revive and defend the integrity of
this institution of our democracy.

 

The context of this struggle was also located to be beyond just provident
fund laws but to be about a case of a classical neoliberalism offensive,
from a government that preaches austerity measures and also expects workers
to pay for the sins of others.  This offensive is represented by the
government's emerging call for cuts in social spending and the unilateral
moderation or even threats to cancel workers wage increases to please
foreign rating agencies.

 

This law will deny workers their right to use their money, in order to
improve their lives, while allowing pension fund managers and consultants to
continue living in opulence, using the same workers money. The recent
reports pointing to the mismanagement of pension and provident funds and the
Unemployment Insurance Fund has widened the trust deficit between workers
and government.

 

Going forward, the meeting called for the escalation of the campaign through
the mobilization of COSATU members, workers in general, Alliance partners,
progressive civil society and communities against this law. We know ,as
proven by history, that workers are their own liberators and will liberate
themselves from these laws. They will not plead for the scrapping of this
law but will fight for the scrapping of this law. They will do what they
have always done in these situations; they will not beg but will demand;
they will fight for their rights and defend their hard-won gains.

 

The meeting appreciated that the ANC NEC instructed that there be a meeting
between the federation and Treasury. This political intervention is as a
result of the pressure that has been put by the federation on all affected
parties on this matter.

 

We are appreciate that as soon as this matter was brought to the attention
of the ANC , they convened a meeting between us and the officials , which
was followed by the ANC NEC Legotla that instructed Treasury to meet us.

 

We will continue to engage with all stakeholders especially government, but
the SCEC was very clear that COSATU should defend its resolution, and cannot
afford to rely on the goodwill and the benevolence of government, especially
considering the trust deficit that has developed between us and government. 

 

Going forward, we shall act urgently to mobilize and galvanize workers,
starting with the lunchtime pickets and a protest action at NEDLAC offices
tomorrow, during the section 77 notice engagements. Between now and COSATU's
ordinary CEC ,which is taking place between the 22nd 24th of February 2016,
we expect all our affiliates to organize protests at Treasury Offices and
also convene workplace meetings and report back sessions in the workplace.
There will also be lunchtime pickets, town based meetings and that
mobilization process will be assessed by the COSATU ordinary CEC later this
month.

 

The nationwide shopsteward councils and protest will continue after the
normal CEC and will also include provincial marches. This will be in
preparation for a massive general strike that is planned to coincide with
the implementation date of this law, which is the 1st of March 2016, subject
to NEDLAC engagements tomorrow.

 

The message coming from the CEC is very clear; we will only stop this
campaign if the law is scrapped. We want the whole process of social
security and pension reform to be restarted at NEDLAC. Retirement's savings
belong to workers and they will decide what they want to do with them and no
one else. The tactics to divide the workers and the misinformation campaign
from the state has not worked. Workers are united on this issue and the
federation is ready to lead them to battle.

 

Workers should not resign because that will weaken our organizational power
and is tantamount to cowardice and giving up. Some of our struggles are
already yielding results, we are happy that government has concluded the
sectoral determination for farm workers, but we are also concerned that they
are delaying the promulgation of sectoral determination in the Wholesale and
Retail Sector. We are also happy with the content of the UIF proposals.

Border Management Agency

The SCEC also received a report about the planned Border Management Agency
by the department of Home Affairs, working with other departments. This
agency is allegedly meant to police our porous borders. Another law is also
planned to formalise the formation of this border agency. The SCEC
overwhelmingly and totally rejected this agencification of the state. It
noted that our government is slowly legislating all South African problems
instead of dealing with them.

Our experience as the federation is that, these agencies do not solve
service delivery problems but they create an elite force of workers, who are
overpaid to do what can be done by workers in government departments. They
are also looted and abused by the political interest and are more expensive
to the taxpayer. Some of the proposed aspects of this agency will also
undermine the binding nature of collective bargaining and will allow
ministers to unilaterally determine salaries and recruitment outside of
bargaining processes. Agencification in general takes our right to strike,
destroy collective bargaining and their proposed enforcement of the
confidentiality clause in the contracts of the workers, will undermine the
workers' rights. There are enough laws already in place dealing with
information management in this country.

Agencies have been abused in this country, and are not accountable, as we
have seen with many of them. This proposal also goes against the ANC
position of strengthening the capacity of the state. The ANC clearly stated
that one of the identified reasons for an unresponsive state was outsourcing
and the emasculation of the state. The ANC and the Alliance positions are
unambiguous in that we need to increase the capacity of the state, so that
the state can drive the movement's developmental agenda. This is a deviation
from that understanding and we will vigorously oppose it, if it is
unilaterally imposed on the workers. All of these goals can be achieved
under the umbrella of the departments themselves, if they are working
together and also improving their level of efficiency.

 

Ministerial Task Team report

 

The federation also discussed and condemned the leaked and sometimes
political findings of the Basic Education Ministerial Task team
investigating the selling of posts in schools. Firstly, the CEC condemned
the leaking of this report and concluded that it is a deliberate attempt
meant to smear, malign and alienate our affiliate SADTU in public.

 

Some of the leaked information coming out of this report is very troubling
for the federation. The report goes on to even cite the ANC, SADTU and the
SACP, as the corrupt parties colluding to corrupt the education system. It
recommends the creation of staff associations to replace SADTU from
organising principals, HOD's and other office workers. It also recommends
the isolation and exclusion of School Governing Bodies from the school
recruitment processes. This goes against the ANC's theme of advancing the
People's Power.

 

We call on the Minister to refrain from publicly using SADTU as a scapegoat
and she must also stop the leaking of this report. The parties being smeared
by these leaks were not even given an opportunity to respond and defend
themselves. We shall escalate these issues to our upcoming CEC at the end of
the month. COSATU is clear that it will not stand idly while a campaign is
emerging and underway to undermine the federations and its affiliates
through laws and leaks.

 

The message is clear in that workers are ready to fight for their rights and
will not bow down to either state or business sponsored offensive.

 

 

Issued by COSATU

 

Contact:

Sizwe Pamla, National Spokesperson, 060 975 6794

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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