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Amplats boss: They leave us no choice

Johannesburg - The world’s top platinum producer, Anglo Platinum [JSE:AMS] (Amplats), has started disciplinary action including possible dismissal against workers taking part in an illegal strike, the company said on Thursday.

The company, a unit of global mining giant Anglo American [JSE:AGL], also said that attendance at its four mines near Rustenburg, 120km northwest of Johannesburg, remained below 20% despite repeated threats to get tough.

A wave of wildcat strikes is roiling South Africa’s mining sector despite the end of an illegal six-week stoppage at platinum producer Lonmin  in which 46 people were killed.

Amplats’ chief executive Chris Griffith said on Wednesday the company would start making good on threats to sack workers if they did not report for duty within 24 hours.

“Despite repeatedly urging our employees to come back to work, attendance at our Rustenburg operations remains low,” he said.

“We have been left with no choice but to initiate disciplinary action, which could lead to dismissals.”

But striking workers on Thursday appeared unfazed by the threats of dismissal.

Rustenburg labour activist and community representative Mametlwe Sebei struck a defiant tone, saying striking Amplats workers were not intimidated by the ultimatum.

“No amount of threats are going to move our workers from their demands,” he told Reuters.

"We are not worried about that," one worker told AFP outside Thembelani, one of the five Amplats mines sitting on South Africa's platinum belt. "We want money, we want money."

Another miner, who asked not to be identified, also dismissed the company's warning as empty.

"The company will not fire us. They said at (the Lonmin mine in) Marikana they would fire those guys, but now they're not firing," he said shortly before Amplats announced it had started acting against strikers.

Amplats accounts for 38% of global platinum production, providing a resource that is key in vehicles and jewelry. It is the subsidiary of the country's largest private sector employer, Anglo American.

Workers are pushing for at least the 11% to 22% raises that Lonmin miners at the nearby Marikana mine received after a deadly strike that left 46 dead, 35 of whom were killed by police.

There have been fears the Lonmin deal set a dangerous precedent, as the workers secured the deal by bypassing recognised union structures.

The demands include an increase in a minimum monthly wage to R12 500, more than double that currently earned by those at the bottom of the pay scale.

When rival Impala Platinum [JSE:IMP] (Implats) fired 17 000 illegal strikers in the same area in January, it unleashed a wave of violence that closed its Rustenburg operation, the world’s largest platinum mine, for 6 weeks. Three people were killed.

ANC outcast Julius Malema, a populist who has backed the wildcat strikes and called for the nationalisation of mines, was due to address Implats’ workers later on Thursday to encourage them to press for higher wages.

Close to 75 000 workers are on strike or being prevented from going to work in South Africa’s mining sector, including at mines run by the world’s third- and fourth-biggest bullion producers, AngloGold Ashanti [JSE:ANG] and Gold Fields [JSE:GFI].


 
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