The South African
police have confirmed that its officers shot and killed 34 striking miners and
injured 78 near a platinum mine in North West province.
The officers shot
at the workers who were protesting on Thursday afternoon over pay at the Lonmin
platinum mine in Marikana, some 100km northwest of Johannesburg.
"There
has been a protracted process at not only this mine but another neighbouring
mine ... where this breakaway union ... has been using and threatening violence
to try to coerce workers into joining their ranks. And this has created an
atmosphere of fear and terror, which is destroying the trade union movement in
that area." -
Patrick Craven, the national spokesperson for the Congress of South African
Trade Unions
The incident is
being described as one of the bloodiest police operations in the country since
the end of white-minority rule almost 20 years ago.
But this latest
labour dispute is also between unions. The country's largest syndicate for mine
workers is closely allied with the government. It is being challenged by an
upstart trade union that is demanding better pay and working conditions.
The union leaders
seem to agree on one thing; they accuse the police of committing a massacre.
But the police argue that the protesters were armed and the shooting was in
self-defence.
Before Thursday,
10 people had already been killed since the start of this illegal strike in
violence largely blamed on union rivalry, including two police officers who
were hacked to death by striking miners on Monday.
Given the riches
beneath their feet at the platinum mine, one union leader said it was only fair
they get more pay.
"As long as
bosses and senior management are getting fat cheques, that's good for
them," said Jeffrey Matunjwa of the Mineworkers and Construction Union.
"And these workers are subjected to poverty for life. [After] 18 years of
democracy, the mineworker is still earning 3,000 [South African Rand -
approximately $360] under those harsh conditions underground."
But what started
violently has ended in bloodshed few could have foreseen. It has led labour
relations at the mine in tatters and families angry.
So, what was
behind this brutal police crackdown and how will it play out politically in
South Africa?
Joining Inside
Story, with presenter Ghida Fakhry, to discuss this are guests: Patrick Craven,
the national spokesperson for the Congress of South African Trade Unions; David
Wilson, a senior analyst at IHS Global Insight; and Zweli Mnisi, a spokesperson
for the Ministry of Police Services.
"The
situation that we see on the ground now was kind of like a perfect storm in
that so much of what was wrong all came together at the same time. So, not only
are we in the middle of a recession, not only have we also had very high
unemployment for quite a while, not only have we got that sort of strange
structural thing ... where a worker has to support more than just himself. So,
not only have we got all of this. At the same time we have lots of very complex
union politics happening all together."


