Business
"The strike is commencing on Friday morning," said Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu) treasurer Jimmy Gama.
The top global producer on September 2 handed 3 300 employees dismissal notices as part of a restructuring, and announced earlier it would offer a further 1 600 workers voluntary severance packages.
Talks with unions following the announcement broke down, said Gama.
Amcu, which represents 40% of the workforce at the firm's main operations in Rustenburg north-west of Johannesburg, said few applications for severance packages had been successful.
"There are still applications that the company doesn't want to approve. The company is rushing to forcefully retrench workers," said Gama.
Confirmed planned strike
The stoppages would affect Rustenburg and Limpopo operations in the north of the country, he added.
Amplats spokesperson Mpumi Sithole confirmed the planned strike.
"We received notice from Amcu yesterday," she told Agence France-Presse.
The industrial action occurs amid ongoing unrest in the mining sector, which accounts for a fifth of Africa's largest economy.
Violent strikes spread across the industry in August 2012 after a deadly police crackdown at Lonmin's platinum mine in Marikana, where officers shot dead 34 people in one day.
After wage increases last year, Amplats announced 14 000 job cuts, but since then backed down under government and union pressure to limit cuts to 4 900. – AF
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