Miners to giveback to employment after pay rise ends five weeks of bitter industrial action during which 45 human beings were killedStriking platinum miners in South Africa have accepted an agreement with Lonmin and plot to giveback to employment on Thursday, all however ending five weeks of acrimony, bloodshed and tragedy.The police massacre of 34 protesting mineworkers at Marikana at the end month was the worst exhibit of state violence in the nation’s advertise-apartheid history. In all 45 human beings died during the bitter industrial action. Unrest spread to other mines, threatening the backbone of South Africa’s economy.On Tuesday strikers gathered near the Marikana mine 60 miles north-west of Johannesburg cheered when they were informed of London-listed Lonmin’s final offer. It includes a 22% pay increase for rock drillers – taking their salary to just over 11,000 rand (£825) – and a one-off payment of 2,000 rand (£150) to aid cover nearly six weeks of not being paid while on strike, Bishop Joe Seoka, a member of the negotiating team, told Associated Press.About 5,000 strikers gathered in a stadium to hear the deal and cheered and sang when they finally accepted the offer, described as record-breaking. They formed a border and danced outside of the stadium.”You have won as workers,” Seoka told the crowd. He said there would be further negotiations in October where they could discuss a further increase.One worker held up a palm with the phrase “Mission Accomplished” written in black ink. All that remains is for the parties to sign the final agreement. A Lonmin spokesman said it had not yet received official acceptance from worker representatives so was unable to comment.Opposition parties welcomed the settlement. Sej Motau, shadow minister of labour for the Democratic Alliance, said: “We hope that this brings the necessary stability to the situation at Marikana, for appropriate humanitarian aid to be provided to the families of Marikana victims and for unencumbered reflection on the majoritarian labour regime that has contributed to the tragedy.”The DA remains convinced that the events at Marikana could have been prevented through a more equitable labour regime, with a bigger prepared police supply and in a minerals sector in which policies serve a broader range of stakeholders. We will be using our position in parliament to push for appropriate policy reforms.”We hope that the Marikana workers will be allowed to giveback to employment without dread for their safety.”The deadly strike has shaken Lonmin, mining and the whole of South Africa, triggering a wide ranging debate about the role of mining companies and labour unions, persistent police brutality and impatience at the governing African National Congress’s lack of progress in arresting inequality after 18 years.The ferocity of the administration’s crackdown, and allegations that police tortured detained mineworkers, has been compared with the era of racial apartheid. At the end weekend soldiers supported police as they seized weapons and dispersed some protesting workers with teargas and rubber bullets.Lonmin’s acting chief executive Simon Scott wrote in South Africa’s Sunday Times: “For Lonmin the starting mark is to acknowledge that our corporation must go through a action of self-reflection.”What I can promise is that we are committed to playing our part. We have had our wake-up call, as has the rest of South Africa.”The Lonmin workers were the first to strike and in recent weeks seven other mines had employment stoppages. Partially led by the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU), the strikes have swept across the platinum belt, house to nearly 80% of the earth’s reserves. AMCU is challenging the dominance of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), whose leaders have grown rich and powerful from an alliance with the ANC, which has relied on organised labour for votes.The employment stoppages reportedly cost the nation more than 4.5bn rand (£335m). They hit the rand currency, raised insurance against default on South African debt and spooked some foreign investors into selling shares in mining companies.In another sign that weeks of labour unrest could be ending, Anglo American Platinum said it had resumed its operations in the strike-hit Rustenburg area.”Anglo American Platinum Limited (Amplats) confirms that all of its Rustenburg operations have resumed, effective from today’s morning shift,” the corporation said.On the news of the Marikana agreement, the spot platinum value fell 2% to a session low at $1,627.49/oz and the rand firmed against the dollar.The conflict in the mining sector had also hurt president Jacob Zuma and the ANC, whose response was seen as slow and ineffective. They face accusations that they had neglected poor workers and sided with wealthy business owners.On Tuesday Julius Malema, an ANC rebel who calls for the nationalisation of mines, criticised Zuma for sending the army to Marikana in recent days as if was under an “undeclared state of emergency”. Malema added: “Never in the history of the ANC has a sitting president presided over such chaos and division in the ANC and the nation.”LonminMiningSouth AfricaAfricaDavid Smithguardian.co.uk © 2012 Twitter News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Employ of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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