A drive to establish white farmers from SA throughout the African continent has commenced.
World Cup worry
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Wed, 08 Jul 2009 09:03
Some 70 000 construction workers are set to down tools at 2010
World Cup stadia on Wednesday to demand higher wages.
The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) is demanding a 13
percent salary increase while the SA Federation of Civil
Engineering Contractors (Safcec) has offered a 10 percent hike.
"It is unfortunate that we are dealing with very arrogant
employers... we have reduced our demands," said NUM secretary
general Frans Baleni on Wednesday morning.
"[But] on our side we are always open to engagement," he told
SABC radio news.
Baleni said more talks were scheduled to take place on Thursday.
But Safcec said on Tuesday that the workers' demands were
equivalent to an increase of 65 percent in rand terms.
The Black Construction Council said a strike was "long overdue".
"It is a shame for these Safcec-led groups to believe what
labour demands is unreasonable. The construction boom was not
inflation driven,
so to believe workers only deserve inflation
driven increases is wrong," the council's president Sam Moleshiwa
said in a statement.
"Over 70 000 construction workers will on Wednesday down tools,"
NUM spokesperson Lesiba Seshoka announced earlier this week, after
winning a ruling in its favour in the Labour Court.
The 2010 World Cup stadiums expected to be affected include the
Moses Mobhida in Durban, Nelson Mandela in Port Elizabeth, Peter
Mokaba in Polokwane, Green Point in Cape Town, Mbombela in
Nelspruit, Soccer City and Mthatha stadiums.
The Fifa deadline for the completion of all stadiums is October
15 this year.