NUM left wage talks too late, inquiry hears

this discussion with Lonmin. You elected not to, until lives were lost,” Ishmael Semenya, for the police, said.

He was cross-examining branch chairperson at Lonmin western platinum mine, William Sethele, during the inquiry in Rustenburg.
“I think it’s your views,” Sethele responded.

Semenya argued the NUM should have approached Lonmin before the first two people, two security guards, were killed on 12 August, during violent strikes at the company’s Marikana mine in the North West.

Sethele maintained the union could not approach Lonmin without a mandate from its members.
“How can you talk of something that you don’t have a mandate for? Where are you going to take that feedback? Because the people on the mountain didn’t want us.”

Semenya said he would argue it was always possible for the NUM, as union, and Lonmin, as employer, to reach this agreement without loss of life.
Sethele disagreed, maintaining the NUM were unable to meet strikers.

“The union and management cannot reach a solution in the absence of the workers.”
Semenya asked him whether, if all parties had sat down for negotiations, it would have been possible for a wage agreement to have been signed before August 9.
“I think it’s possible,” replied Sethele.

Earlier, he testified how he told striking Lonmin miners to return to work before the first deaths at Marikana.

“I stressed that employees who took part in illegal strike action may jeopardise their employment, and urged them to think of their families and dependants,” Sethele wrote in a statement.
Karel Tip, for the NUM, was reading from Sethele’s statement at the inquiry.

Sethele said he even told strikers over a megaphone, on 11 August, that the strike was unprotected and the union did not endorse it.

Last Friday, the NUM’s chief negotiator during the deadly strike, Erick Gcilitshana, testified the union’s attitude towards wage negotiations during the strike, in August last year, was irresponsible.

The commission is probing the deaths of 44 people during an unprotected strike at Lonmin’s platinum mine in Marikana, North West, last year. — Sapa.

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