The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) in Gauteng on Saturday said it supported calls by the ANC Youth League (ANCYL) to nationalise the country’s mines.
“The call by the ANCYL is proper and very progressive in this instance,” said provincial secretary Dumisani Dakile, following a two-day meeting of the federation’s provincial executive committee.
The committee would introduce the nationalisation debate at Cosatu’s central executive committee meeting, set to take place in Johannesburg from March 1 to 3.
Nationalisation had long been on the agenda of the federation, he said.
“In fact, the call of the youth league is in support of Cosatu.”
Nersa hearings were ‘dress rehearsal’
Dakile said the provincial executive committee also rejected the National Energy Regulator of SA’s (Nersa) recent decision allowing power utility Eskom to hike the price of electricity by about 25% a year for the next three years.
“The public hearings [held by Nersa into the increases] were nothing but just a mere dress rehearsal to fool the public, as the decision was already taken,” he said.
Dakile called for the resignation of the Nersa board, whose bias had become clear from the line of questioning during the hearings.
“Whose decision are they protecting?” he asked.
He compared the decision to stabbing a patient as they came out of intensive care.
“That is the state of our economy in the recession,” he said.
He called on Cosatu’s national federation to mount a “full blown” two-day strike in protest against the regulator’s decision.
Lifestyle audits
Cosatu’s Gauteng leadership also volunteered to undergo lifestyle audits and called on the national federation’s leadership, other alliance leaders and opposition parties to do the same, “starting from Helen Zille going down to every Dick and Harry”.
On the issue of affirmative action, Dakile said he disagreed with the labour court’s judgement in Johannesburg ordering the South African Police Service (SAPS) to promote a white woman.
“This judgement attacks the fundamental principle of affirmative action as protected in the Constitution,” he said.
“It goes against the progress made in transformation up to now.”
Captain Renate Barnard was denied promotion to superintendent twice because as a white woman she would not contribute to the SAPS’ transformation targets.
Dakile conceded that a position should be filled with an appropriate candidate if a member of the designated group was unavailable or unfit to do so.
However, appointments should not be made only based on ability but also on potential, he said.
“Why can’t you provide opportunity for them to improve themselves?” he asked, adding that the SAPS needed “vigorous transformation”. – Sapa