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Nehawu threatens with shutdown of public service

A march by workers affiliated to the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu) in the province commencing at SABC Park earlier today, carried the threat of rolling mass action across the entire public service in Limpopo to build up to an indefinite shutdown if matters raised by the workers were not resolved. With …

A march by workers affiliated to the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu) in the province commencing at SABC Park earlier today, carried the threat of rolling mass action across the entire public service in Limpopo to build up to an indefinite shutdown if matters raised by the workers were not resolved.
With their memoranda of demands directed to the Premier Stan Mathabatha and Provincial Treasury MEC Rob Tooley, Nehawu’s Provincial Executive Committee (PEC) representing an estimated 30 000 workers in Limpopo served a final warning to government. They granted the provincial government seven days to respond.
In the memoranda they demanded, among others, the scrapping of the Provincial Personnel Management Framework (PPMF) “which has literally put all departments in some form of administration by centralising all powers to appoint in the Treasury’s office” as well as unfair rental fees equivalent to a housing allowance and accumulated arrears, availing necessary budget to resolve all challenges in the Department of Social Development, the implementation of recommendations following investigations at certain hospitals and the Department of Public Works, and then also rejecting the implementation of Treasury instructions put in place as part of austerity measures.

Dan Sematla of the South African Communist Party (SACP) in Limpopo takes to the podium.
Dan Sematla of the South African Communist Party (SACP) in Limpopo takes to the podium.

In the absence of ruling party representation at the occasion, alliance partners took to the podium with messages that contained harsh criticism directed at the leadership and government of Stan Mathabatha.
Announcing intended rolling mass action in Limpopo in his address at the start of the march, Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) Provincial Secretary Gerald Twala summarised the reason for the gathering as anger towards the provincial government. He suggested the convening of listening campaigns to establish the demands of workers.
“Today is the start of our rolling mass action in Limpopo until the demands of workers are addressed.” They would proceed next week across the province with pickets, mini-marches and marches in demand of the rights of workers, he announced. They would talk politics after workers’ demands were met, Twala continued saying. Before concluding his speech he indicated that they would ask workers to tell them whether the current ANC leadership in the province was fit to lead the party.
Declaring war on corruption, Dan Sematla on behalf of the South African Communist Party (SACP) in Limpopo reminded those present that they had previously defeated a new tendency in the province that was led by erstwhile Premier Cassel Mathale and former African National Congress Youth League (Ancyl) leader Julius Malema. Today another tendency that has just emerged has been analysed and renamed by the SACP in Limpopo and nationally was a parasitic bourgeois – a group of shrewd businesspeople wanting to take the province back, he said before adding that technically Limpopo was under administration. The SACP message he conveyed was directed at Mathabatha to return to the Ukraine where he came from if he was tired of leading the province. At the same time he questioned Tooley’s political credentials.
He called on all workers to support the SACP when saying it was time for the working class to take over, because the ANC also was in trouble and were busy fighting for positions during the local government elections while poor people were suffering. It was time for the workers in the province to unite to take over the ANC leadership in Limpopo, he concluded.

Story: YOLANDE NEL
>>observer.yolande@gmail.com
Photos: Yolande Nel  / Nelie Erasmus

Featured photo: National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu) Provincial Secretary Jacob Adams explains the line of march for the delivery of the memoranda of demands at the Office of the Premier and Provincial Treasury.

Health MEC Phophi Ramathuba signs acceptance of the memorandum with Provincial Treasury MEC, Rob Tooley looking on. With them are Nehawu Provincial Chairperson Calvin Tshamano and Provincial Secretary Jacob Adams.
Health MEC Phophi Ramathuba signs acceptance of the memorandum with Provincial Treasury MEC, Rob Tooley looking on. With them are Nehawu Provincial Chairperson Calvin Tshamano and Provincial Secretary Jacob Adams.
A marcher armed with a whistle dances to a revolutionary song.
A marcher armed with a whistle dances to a revolutionary song.
Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) Provincial Secretary Gerald Twala addresses the crowd.
Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) Provincial Secretary Gerald Twala addresses the crowd.

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