Star2.jpg

 

 

COSATU cancels national strike

 

 

Thabiso Thakali, The Star, Johannesburg, 26 February 2016

 

COSATU has backed down on its national strike planned for next week in
protest against the Tax Law Amendment Act.

 

This comes after the government decided to delay parts of the retirement
reform law by two years and to reopen the consultation process with labour
and table proposals for a comprehensive social security plan.

 

This week, the government announced a bill to postpone the controversial tax
reforms affecting workers' pension funds.

 

Yesterday, after its central executive committee meeting, COSATU said cited
the government's turnaround as the reason for cancelling the strike. The
union's U-turn came despite the federation vowing to go ahead with the
strike, fearing the ANC had made the concession as an election ploy.

 

"The federation shall deepen its mobilisation until all workers' demands are
met," said COSATU general secretary Bheki Ntshalintshali, addressing
journalists in Joburg.

 

"We shall continue to monitor the progress of the negotiations and will keep
having mobilisation activities, including pickets, demonstrations and shop
steward councils, to update workers on developments."

 

The trade union federation said, while it wanted the state to completely
scrap the retirement reforms rather than delay their implementation, the
caving in by the government represented "first signs of victory" for
workers.

 

However, ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe described the delay as "an
academic exercise and semantics".

 

"The issue that people are complaining about of preservation [pension funds]
will only kick in in at least five years, and up to 10 years for others," he
said.

 

The retirement reform law has been the latest source of tension between
COSATU and the ANC, with the federation threatening not to campaign for the
ruling party in the local government elections if the law was not reversed.

 

Mantashe's comments downplaying the federation's "victory" on the Tax Law
Amendment Act annoyed COSATU leaders, who questioned why they shouldn't be
happy if the issues they opposed were going to be removed.

 

COSATU president S'dumo Dlamini suggested Mantashe should heed his own
advice when he took a swipe at former ANC leaders "for publicly projecting
their time of leadership as better and superior".

 

Mantashe is a former general secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers,
a COSATU affiliate.

 

However, COSATU's central executive committee committed its support to the
ANC ahead of the local government elections. COSATU warned, though, that it
would not support any councillor candidates imposed on communities or who
are implicated in corruption or criminal activities.

 

Among other issues, COSATU urged the government to speed up land reform and
called for amendments to prohibit any compensation of individuals whose
property was acquired during apartheid and colonial removals.

 

It also urged the government to take 50 percent ownership of all mining
companies in the country.

 

@thabiso_tk

 

From:
http://www.iol.co.za/business/news/cosatu-backs-down-on-strike-threat-199005
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