Labour

Cosatu on the Verge of Major Split?

Picture: GovernmentZA/Flickr Video Following Zwelinzima Vavi’s suspension from Cosatu, Patrick Bond, Director of the Centre For Civil Society at the University of KZN argues that Vavi’s predicament is also linked to an ideological conflict in the trade union federation, which could potentially lead to the establishment of a workers' party. On the one side, he argues, “We have a very interesting situation where a more socialist-oriented bloc within the trade union, especially NUMSA, have worked closely with...

Can COSATU's Former Glory Be Restored?

Picture: COSATU Secretary General Zwelizima Vavi, President Jacob Zuma and COSATU President Sdumo Dlamini during the 5th COSATU Central Committee gathering held at Gallagher Estate in Midrand courtesy GovernmentZA/Flickr. Frank Meintjies - The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) is a giant, but a wounded one. For over 25 years, it has dominated the labour scene as the voice of organised workers. But now, there are big changes in the world of trade unions and rumblings that new forces are entering the scene. This has been brought to the fore with the emergence of Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU) and its rise to majority union status in the platinum sector. Writing in the wake of Marikana,...

Vavi: Discursive Tension Stifles Rape Discussion

Picture: Zwelinzima Vavi, General Secretary of Congress of South African Trade Unions courtesy GovernmentZA/Flickr. Mandisi Majavu - One of the issues that the rape allegations against Zwelinzima Vavi highlighted is the unresolved discursive tension between feminists and anti-racists. This discursive tension  stems from the way in which both the feminist and anti-racist intellectual tradition respectively regard sexuality as a site upon which the oppression of women and the repression of black masculinity occurs. Feminists understand rape as a violent patriarchal tool that some men use to assert their power over...

The Sterile Spirit of the Overseer

Picture: libcom.org Richard Pithouse - The deep roots of May Day lie in the ancient forests of Europe. Long before the idea of one God, one stern God, had made its way across the Mediterranean Spring was marked by planting trees, adorning people and homes with sprigs, blossoms and garlands, the erection of Maypoles, lighting bonfires on hilltops, dancing, drinking and general revelry. This celebration of the shared bounty of the natural world was incorporated, along with many other ideas and festivals, into European Christianity...

How Walmart and Other Huge Companies Support Horrific Conditions that Kill Workers

Picture: Bangladeshi Garment Worker Courtesy International Labor Rights Forum Adele M. Stan - A day after Walmart workers and their allies staged protests and rallies outside the company’s stores across the U.S., a fire erupted in a factory across the globe in Bangladesh, killing 112 workers who were trapped inside, where they sewed jeans and other apparel for the retail giant’s Faded Glory brand. Another 200 were injured in the fire. On Monday, the streets of Dhaka, the capital city, were filled with thousands of garment workers, who demanded justice. The main doors of...

The Farm Workers' Strike: It's Far From Over

Picture: socialsoundsystem.com Anna Majavu - The mines and the farms are two enduring symbols of old white colonial theft, of the minerals and land. Because of the monopoly of the National Union of Mineworkers, whose leaders and officials have long preferred compromise and co-determination over worker control, it has been difficult for mineworkers to strike – until the Marikana massacre. It has possibly been even harder for farm workers to strike. Human Rights Watch estimated recently that less than 3% of South African farm...