Marikana Support Campaign Appeal
Marikana Support Campaign
On the 16th
August, South African Police fired live ammunition at striking miners at
Lonmin’s Marikana mine, killing 34 and injuring 78. Many were killed were shot
at close range while trying to surrender. The Marikana miners were demanding a
tripling of their salary to R12,500 (£950 or €1100) per month.
In the following days,
270 of the Marikana strikers were arrested and charged with the murder of their
colleagues under the Common Purpose doctrine, a law last used under Apartheid.
They were released on bail after public pressure forced the National Prosecuting
Authority to provisionally drop the charges. Since the massacre the community of
Marikana has lived under a virtual State of Emergency, with police patrols,
raids and reports of unlawful arrests and harassment. Over half of the Lonmin
Strike Committee due to testify before the Commission of Inquiry have been over
the past days charged with murder.
To date not one police
officer or official has been charged for the massacre at Marikana. Yet some of
the miners still face the prospect of long prison sentences as the State intends
to blame the miners themselves for the violence. Most of the miners who were
killed and badly injured in Marikana were sole breadwinners and the loss of
their earnings has left many of their dependents in a desperate
situation.
The Marikana Lonmin
miners secured a 22 percent pay rise. It was short of the R12,500 demand but the
deal was hailed as a victory. What the miners have actually done is fight a
brave fight for a living wage. They have drawn public attention to the gap
between the wages of mine workers and platinum and gold sector bosses, many of
whom earn 1000 times more than the average miner. The massacre and the victory
have inspired strikes in other mines across the country. The Marikana Support
Campaign has been endorsed by the various strike committees and this has raised
the demand for campaign material.
What the Campaign has achieved so far
The campaign and legal
representatives have kept vigilant watch on the State sponsored Farlam
Commission of Inquiry, pushing for transparency and forcing a postponement to
ensure the presence of families so that the restorative objective of the
commission can be met more effectively. In addition the campaign has organised legal representation for
twenty six of the families, paid for a private forensic pathologist, kept close
watch on biased media reporting and offered alternative analysis, mobilised for
practical support and resources for the families of the strikers,
organised placard protests of the inspection of the killing site as well as
nationwide pickets and demonstrations demanding an end to police harassment and
intimidation of the Marikana community, brought large numbers of people to
Marikana to bolster locally organised protests and to attend strike and
community meetings, produced campaign materials, badges, leaflets and T-shirts
etc; organised striker and community representative speaking tours in cities and
townships across the country.
All of this costs money.
In the coming months we need to increase the pressure on the Farlam Commission
of Inquiry through a coordinated national and international campaign that
presses for a just outcome for the Marikana families of the deceased, the scores
injured, and hundreds arrested.
Account Name: HRMT 1 for Marikana Support Campaign
Bank: Nedbank
Branch: Constantia
Branch Code:
101109
Account No:
1011102366
Reference: Marikana
Support Campaign
SWIFT:
NEDSZAJJ
The Marikana Support Campaign is supported by many organisations
including: Amnesty International SA, Centre for Applied
Legal Studies, Advocates For Transformation Centre for Study of Violence and
Reconciliation, Equal Education Law Centre, Human Rights Media Trust, Lawyers
for Human Rights, Legal Resources Centre, RAITH Foundation, Right To Know,
Section 27, Social Justice Coalition, Socio-Economic Rights Institute, Treatment
Action Campaign, Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union, National
Council of Trade Unions, Marikana Development Forum, Wonderkop Women’s Group,
Wonderkop Tribal Council, Alternative Information Development Centre, Soweto
Concerned Citizens.
Labels: Africa, class struggle
2 Comments:
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