Sapa | 01 September, 2012 08:44
File picture of miners. Around 12,000 workers at a Gold Fields mine have downed tools in a wildcat strike.
Image by: Alon Skuy
Around 12,000 workers at a Gold Fields mine have downed tools in a wildcat strike, according to their employer.
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"Employees of the East Section of the KDC Gold Mine on the West Rand (Johannesburg) in South Africa have been engaging in an unlawful and unprotected strike since the start of the night shift on Wednesday," the company said in a statement on its website.
"Based on informal feedback from employees, the strike appears to be related mainly to disagreements within organised labour and related structures on the mine, although we cannot confirm this," said the company's South head Peter Turner.
Two night and day shifts have been lost and the company had gone to court to get the action declared illegal, it said.
The Gold Fields strike follows a deadly wildcat strike at the Lonmin platinum mine in Marikana two weeks ago, which left 44 dead, of which 34 shot by police. The violence has been blamed in part on union rivalry.
Gold Fields, which is listed on the Johannesburg and New York Stock Exchanges, produces 3.5 million gold equivalent ounces a year, according to its website.
The company operates eight mines in Australia, Ghana, Peru and South Africa.
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Comments by Sonny
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Mr Zuma we hope you are not out of the Country for this one......?
Who can paint a pretty picture of South Africa this Spring!
Between the ANCYL and the striking miners, SA is at war, with its politicians!
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