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Africa|Charter|Energy|Mining|Resources
Africa|Charter|Energy|Mining|Resources
africa|charter|energy|mining|resources

Solidarity urges council, govt to settle out of court to avoid both unrest and delays

9th July 2020

By: Marleny Arnoldi

Deputy Editor Online

     

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Trade union Solidarity has called on the Minerals Council South Africa and the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE) to negotiate and reach an agreement out of court around ownership and the “once empowered, always empowered” principle.

This follows after the High Court ruled that trade unions and mining communities should be added as parties to the court proceedings when matters of ownership are litigated.

The case was between the Minerals Council and the DMRE regarding ownership as contained in the third Mining Charter and clauses on the once empowered, always empowered principle.

The Minerals Council believes this ruling will simply delay legal certainty on these issues.

Solidarity explains in a statement that the current litigation process between the two parties has divisive consequences and interrupts social cohesion in the mining sector.

“A court ruling will mean a win-lose situation that will have far-reaching consequences for the loser while relations between all mining role-players will be further damaged. For this reason, Solidarity calls on the Minerals Council and the department to return to the negotiating table to reach an agreement in terms of which both parties will have to give up something.”

According to Solidarity, the uncertainty that comes with a protracted legal battle that could end up in the Constitutional Court has more negative consequences for mining investment than a settlement that recognises historic empowerment deals while further empowerment, as contained in the charter, will still happen to the benefit of especially mineworkers and mining communities.

The union adds that, should the council be successful in their application, it would mean that mineworkers and mining communities will lose their current 5% ownership allocation − in the form of carried interest.

As a result, the legal dispute will be replaced with tension and unrest at mining level. 

“This is simply a case where the department's top leadership and the council's top leadership now have to show leadership in the midst of a general leadership crisis in the country,” Solidarity says.

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

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