South African state workers protest after rejecting revised wage offer aimed at ending their strike
Johannesburg: Striking South African state workers staged a protest march on Thursday after rejecting a revised wage offer aimed at ending their three-week strike that has the government and the labour movement at loggerheads.
The majority of unions, most of which are in the largest labour federation Cosatu, voted against the offer on Wednesday, prolonging a strike by 1.3 million state workers that a prominent economist said was costing about $150 million (Dh550.8 million) each day.
The strike has shut schools, led to bodies piling up in state morgues and thrown cold water on the national euphoria over hosting the June-July football World Cup.
It also has dampened investor sentiment for Africa's biggest economy.
The government has said it cannot afford the offer it has on the table, let alone anything higher, and will have to make cuts elsewhere to meet it.
"There are behind-the-scenes political discussions going on. I cannot give more details but leaders will continue to work for a solution," Cosatu Secretary-General Zwelinzima Vavi told Reuters.
The government, which offered workers a 7.5 per cent pay raise and 800 rand a month for housing, has said it will be forced to make budget cuts and seek funds to pay for it.
A formal bargaining session between labour and government officials planned on Thursday will now likely to take place on Monday as unions seek more time to persuade their rank-and-file members to reconsider the offer, officials said.
"We expect to hear from unions after they consult members. It's unlikely that they will be done today," Dumisani Nkwamba, spokesman for the public service ministry, said.