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WSWS : News
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South Africa: Public sector workers strike demands pay increase
By Jordan Shilton
4 June 2007
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In what is being described as one of the biggest strikes in
South African history, public sector workers mounted a second
Friday of protest action across the country demanding a pay raise
of 12 percent. On Friday, May 25, demonstrations were held in
many towns and cities in preparation for the strike action taken
on June 1.
With over 700.000 taking part, services across the board are
being disrupted. Seventeen trade unions were involved with memberships
totaling close to 1 million.
The BBC reported police firing rubber bullets outside a hospital
in Cape Town in attempts to disperse demonstrating nurses. Nurses
and doctors joining the strike have been threatened with disciplinary
action by public service and administration minister Geraldine
Fraser-Moleketi.
The education sector is also being affected and workers in
justice, home affairs and correctional services were involved
in the walkouts. The strike was observed across all nine provinces
in South Africa. Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)
spokesman Patrick Craven told Reuters, Reports so far indicate
a very, very good turnout.
An offer of a pay increase of between 6.5 and 9 percent will
be the basis for new negotiations starting early next week. Unions
have been calling for a 12 percent increase in the basic wage
of public service workers, as well as renegotiations of benefits
such as health care coverage. Long-running talks between the government
and trade unions broke down earlier in May. Trade unions have
pledged that action will continue until the government meets its
demands.
Social inequality
The strike action must be viewed against a background of ever
greater levels of social inequality. One teacher, from a school
in the township of Soweto near Johannesburg, explained their reasons
for taking strike action to the BBCs Network Africa programme:
As a teacher Im earning peanuts, I teach many students
but soon after they complete their studies, they earn way more
than I do.
A report issued in 2004 by the Ecumenical Foundation of Southern
Africa (EFSA) noted growing trends of social inequality which
had increased since the end of apartheid in 1994. Of particular
significance is the fact that inequality among black African households
is at a much higher level than in the white population.
The Gini coefficient, which is used to measure social inequality,
calculates wealth distribution across the population. The more
equal a society the figure will be closer to 0, whilst societies
more unequal would be represented by a figure closer to 1. Noting
that South Africa, with a Gini coefficient of 0.6, compared with
Brazil as one of the most unequal countries in the world, the
study commented, This overall figure, however, hides a particular
aspect: the Gini is higher amongst African [black] households
than amongst non-African households. This is the result of some
African households improving their positiona process that
started in the 1990s, but accelerated after 1994.
It would be more correct to say few, rather than
some black households have improved their position.
While a thin layer of black entrepreneurs often associated with
the ruling African National Congress have risen to high positions,
the vast majority of South Africans have seen little improvement.
Huge levels of inequality have created yet more problems. In
February 2007, the murder rate remained one of the highest in
the world at around 18,000 each year. According to the South African
Police Service, for the year 2005 there were 54,926 rapes and
2,320 kidnappings. This has become an increasing concern in business
circles, which view high levels of crime as an impediment to attracting
foreign investment.
Having come to power in 1994 claiming to create new opportunities
for those who had been oppressed and to make a more equal and
fair society, the ANC has shown itself to be a party of big business
and the rich. Those who claimed that victory over apartheid meant
a progressive and even socialist future for South Africa have
been proven wrong.
South Africa has instead ended up, as with all other developing
nations, entirely dependent on foreign investment and thus the
banks and corporations of the imperialist powers.
This can be seen, as an example, in the structure of the membership
of COSATU. According to an article by the BBC in 2004, whilst
its membership had fallen by the relatively small margin of 2
million to 1.7 million since 1994, traditional jobs such as mining
and manufacture had been replaced by more service orientated jobs,
including banking. The article noted, Worker numbers in
traditional manufacturing and mining strongholds have fallen sharply
as companies, often responding to global market conditions, have
slimmed down, restructured and mechanised.
Even the ANCs proposals in its first years of government
for a redistribution and development programme, proposing
some minor social concessions with increased state support, was
considered too radical. After only a few years, a much more right-wing
programme entitled Growth, employment and redistribution
(Gear) was adopted that saw the continual cutting of public spending
and the creeping privatisation of previously state-owned industries,
the telecommunications industry being just one example.
Having instituted the right of workers to strike shortly after
its coming to power in 1994 under pressure from the masses, the
government has in this latest confrontation taken out an order
which forbids strikes in essential services and has
also fully backed the deployment of police to protect against
any intimidating behaviour by demonstrators.
Union complicity
Despite at various points mounting struggles against the ANCs
increasingly rightward moves, COSATU along with the South African
Communist Party (SACP) has given invaluable backing to the government.
In 2002 COSATU launched its so-called anti-privatisation
protests against the ANCs sell-off state assets to the private
sector. Yet it remains part of the tripartite alliance with the
ANC and SACP. It claims to continue this alliance in order to
realize the national democratic revolution in South
Africa and states that it believes that broad fronts
are the most effective way to bring about change.
What South Africas national democratic revolution
established was the environment necessary for a small layer of
black businessmen to join the ruling class, which has been encouraged
by the policy of black economic empowerment. By continuing
the alliance with the ANC and SACP, COSATU shares responsibility
for the privatizations, cuts in state spending and public sector
wages it claims to oppose. At all times the main priority of the
union bureaucracy is to safeguard its own privileges that depend
on its ability to police and impose the demands of the government
and the major corporations. A genuine improvement for workers
cannot be achieved through protests and struggles led by such
bodies.
See Also:
An exchange on Stalinism
with a South African reader
[20 November 2006]
Britain and South
Africa accused of rendering terror suspects
[2 June 2006]
South Africa: Factional
war intensifies between Mbeki and Zuma supporters in ANC
[30 May 2006]
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