Sasol on the wrong side of the Mining Charter
27 September 2018
Trade union Solidarity today said that Sasol now finds itself on the wrong side of the Mining Charter. This comes after the publication of the Mining Charter today. According to the charter, employees must share in company shareholding and all employees must benefit from employee share ownership plans. As such, the charter does not make a distinction between employees based on race.
Arising from the new charter Solidarity has requested Sasol to amend its Khanyisa scheme, a scheme which excludes white employees because of their race. This according to Solidarity Chief Executive Dr Dirk Hermann. The trade union also indicated that it had approached the Department of Mineral Resources and the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration to explain the intention and spirit of the charter to the parties involved.
“Being part of the mining industry Sasol has to comply with the Mining Charter. The new Mining Charter is the product of intense negotiation and consultation between government, mining companies, trade unions and the communities which spanned many years and which ultimately led to consensus being reached. If Sasol does not amend its Khanyisa employee share ownership plan, then they are not observing the consensus achieved between parties in the mining industry,” Hermann said.
According to Hermann, the negotiators of the Mining Charter went out from the premise that workers were merely workers and that no distinction based on race should be made on the factory floor. “Such distinction in shareholding can lead to racial tension, which indeed is now the case at Sasol,” Hermann said.