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WSWS : News
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: South
Africa
Police clampdown on South African VW strikers
By our correspondent
9 March 2000
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A systematic campaign of intimidation has been launched against
striking Volkswagen (VW) auto workers. This follows South African
President Thabo Mbeki's denunciation of their action as illegal.
Out of some 3,000 on strike, 1,300 were sacked and the company
is now recruiting a replacement workforce.
Armed riot police now patrol the streets of Uitenhage, where
the VW plant is located, in a clampdown designed to intimidate
the workers and impede their activities.
Following stories that the strikers were involved in petrol
bombing the house of a worker who returned to work, 200 armed
police have been deployed in the town. No evidence of the attack
has been produced and the strikers say it was the work of security
forces. Heavily armed soldiers have been stationed on the routes
normally used by the strikers. The police routinely follow strikers
and committee members, stop them without reason and question them.
At 3 a.m. last Thursday, March 2 troops cordoned off a section
of Kwanobuhle, home to many of the 6,000-strong workforce. Armed
police then began a systematic house-to-house search that ended
with two arrestsone for cannabis possession and one for
failure to appear in court on an unspecified charge.
Since Mbeki's speech, the strikers themselves have been the
victims of attacks. A man driving a black Polo pointed a gun at
Uitenhage Crisis Committee Chairperson W.M. Ndandani. Members
of the committee have been victimised and dismissed from their
jobs. The local ANC-controlled council has denied access for the
strikers to their normal meeting places.
This attack on democratic rights is in response to the campaign
by many present and former VW employees for the reinstatement
of the 1,300 dismissed workers through go-slows, lunchtime pickets
and petitions. VW's communications manager, Matt Gennrich, confirmed
last week that the chairs of both VW International and VW South
Africa had discussed the strike with President Mbeki at the World
Economic Forum in Switzerland.
See Also:
Sacked South African Volkswagen
workers appeal for international support
[17 February 2000]
President Mbeki threatens South
African workers
[9 February 2000]
South Africa
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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