Saturday, November 30, 2013

Petrol attendant strike stretches into ninth day

 Sapa
The strike in the petrol and motor retail industry has continued into its ninth day after talks to resolve it collapsed.
The union has demanded a R30 an hour across the board increase by 2016. (Gallo)
National Union of Metalworkers of SA (Numsa) spokesperson Castro Ngobese said on Tuesday that negotiations with employers had yielded no results by Monday evening.
"The talks collapsed last night. The strike is continuing," he said.


Employers' organisation the Retail Motor Industry Organisation (RMI) chief executive Jakkie Olivier said no agreement was reached in the negotiations on Monday night.
The talks would not resume on Tuesday, he said.


The union has demanded a R30 an hour across the board increase by 2016 on actual rates of pay in all sectors, and divisions for workers earning above R6 000 a month.
Petrol attendants and car repair workers embarked on the nationwide strike last Monday.


Injury
A petrol attendant in New Germany, KwaZulu-Natal, was seriously injured on Tuesday morning in an altercation said to be related to the strike, paramedics said.


"The man, who is believed to have been working in plain clothes, is believed to have been involved in an altercation with an unknown party," ER24 spokesperson Vanessa Jackson said.
Eye witnesses said the assault could have been linked to the Numsa strike, she said.
The man was taken to hospital with a serious head injury.


Police could not immediately be reached for verification of the incident.
Numsa KwaZulu-Natal regional secretary Mbuso Ngubane said he could not comment on the New Germany assault, as he had not heard about it.


On Thursday he said the union had rejected a revised wage offer of 7.5%. Numsa has demanded a double-digit percentage increase. – Sapa

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