HomeInternationalPublic workers begin strike in South Africa

Public workers begin strike in South Africa

Date:

Related stories

Joe Biden diagnosed with prostate cancer

Former U.S. President Joe Biden has been diagnosed with...

Israeli strike kills journalist in Gaza

An Israeli airstrike on Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis...

US pastor abducted during church service in South Africa

A 45-year-old American missionary, Pastor Josh Sullivan, was abducted...

Trump announces 125% tariff on China, 90-day pause for other nations

Former U.S. President Donald Trump has announced a sharp...

No country develops through democracy – Traoré

President of Burkina Faso, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, has stated...
spot_img

Thousands of public workers in South Africa downed tools on Thursday in a nationwide strike over wages after talks with the government hit a deadlock.

The work stoppage was led by one of South Africa’s largest labour unions, the Public Servants Association (PSA), which has more than 235,000 members.

The wage stalemate between the government and its employees escalated after Labour Minister Thulas Nxesi last week declared he would unilaterally implement a three percent increase across the board. Unions want a 6.5 percent hike.

Union members including nurses, immigration workers and some police officers picketed outside the National Treasury offices in Pretoria waving black placards reading “public servants are bleeding” and delivered a list of demands.

In Johannesburg municipal employees marched to the city mayor’s office.

“In the past two years we have been affected by Covid, food (costs are) increasing on daily basis… but you find that the same workers are still earning the same salary in the past five years,” Mish Mdlalose, a municipal worker and politician told AFP.

The PSA said the labour minister’s “irresponsible action has further damaged the already fragile relations and severe trust deficit” between government and unions.

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana said during his October mini-budget speech that government could only afford an average wage increase of 3.3 percent.

The increase weighs below South Africa’s inflation which peaked at 7.8 percent in July.

South Africa’s economy recently took a blow when workers at the state rail and port firm launched a weeks-long strike which left mineral and fresh fruit exports stranded.

AFP

Subscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here