Striking Vodacom employees were outraged that the company had blocked their cellphones, the Communication Workers Union (CWU) said on Friday.
This came after the service provider blocked the strikers’ cellphones, citing a ”no work, no pay, and no benefits” policy.
CWU spokesperson Mfanafuthi Sithebe said: ”Vodacom confirms our long held view that the company has employed reactionary expatriates with no knowledge of the labour laws and the supreme law of the country.”
He hoped Vodacom would not extend its ”no benefits” policy and cut off medical aid as well.
Vodacom spokesperson Dot Field said on Thursday that strikers had been locked out.
Field said the cellphones were not blocked and the workers were free to insert their own SIM cards into the handsets.
Sithebe responded, saying: ”The shallow legal opinions by Vodacom legal services is nothing else but tactics aimed at undermining endeavours by the Department of Communication to normalise the situation.”
Workers continued to picket outside Vodaworld headquarters in Midrand, and the company’s Port Elizabeth office on Friday morning.
A memorandum of demands was handed to the company on Wednesday.
Sithebe said the picketing had so far been peaceful.
The employees were protesting against unsatisfactory working conditions. – Sapa