Pretoria - Mineral Resources Minister Susan Shabangu said on Friday that instead of joining hands and promoting unity, "trade unions were busy decimating each other, as we have seen last week."
Rivalry between NUM and Amcu in Rustenburg and the mining sector had intensified and escalated into violence.
Shabangu told NUM's central committee meeting in Pretoria that the right to associate or disassociate was enshrined in the Constitution.
She said it was a testing time for the National Union of Mineworkers and it could not be blamed for the violence in the mining sector.
"As I believe, the NUM belongs to the discipline of the left therefore it cannot be held responsible for the violence on other unions.
"It can also never be correct that marches are being held to scare management to close the office of minority trade unions."
NUM needed to represent its workers without fear or favour.
Shabangu said violence and murder could not be used to coerce people to join a union.
"We are calling for a peaceful co-existence of unions in the mining industry; let freedom of association prevail.
"The NUM is not the enemy of Amcu (Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union), and Amcu is not and should not be the enemy of NUM."
Shabangu said the unions needed to join hands as they had one common class enemy -- "monopoly capital".
"You are both organisations that should represent the class interests of mine workers... Monopoly can only thrive through divide and rule.