.
We now have over 70,000 articles in our archive. Please don't forget to rate articles you read. Your votes will be reflected in the Weekly & All-Time rankings of the articles. Robert Mugabe has stolen every election & ruled Zimbabwe illegally since 2002. The most open theft was observed & proven on 29 March 2008.
           News       
  News - General 
  South Africa 
  Zimbabwe 
  Cartoons 
  AmericanCrisis 
  Witchcraft that Kills 
 Mailing Lists 
  Subscribe 
  Unsubscribe 
 Do your bit... 
  Spread this 
 Jan Lamprecht 
  Jan's Articles 
  Stock Markets 
  Graphs & Charts 
  Deep Politics 
  My Trip to USA 
  Special Articles 
  Special Gallery 
 Columnists 
  Collen Makumbirofa 
  JanOlifant 
  Right Perspective 
  Robb Ellis 
Readers' Comments  
  Most Recent 
  Most Popular 
  Guestbook 
  Our Online Shop 
 Reader's Favourites 
  The All-Time Top 40 
  Last Week's Best 20 
  The Worst 20 
 Predictions Analysis 
  Explanation 
  Latest Scenarios 
  Latest Predictions 
  Latest Comments 
  Predictions due 
  Add a Prediction 
         Other         
  Search Engine 
  Photo Gallery 
  Classic Gallery 
  Afrikaans 
  Humour 
  Audio & Radio 
  White Homeland 
   Quick Translation 
  Arabic 
  Chinese 
  French 
  German 
  Italian 
  Japanese 
  Korean 
  Portuguese 
  Russian 
  Spanish 

Please tell us what you think of this article by clicking on a button & rating it:-
    


S.African Airways strike comes to an end

Date Posted: Thursday 28-Jul-2005

SOUTH African Airways (SAA) operations are expected to start returning to normal today, after SAA and trade unions struck a deal to end the damaging six-day strike which brought chaos to air travel in SA.

SAA and the cabin crew and ground staff unions settled on a compromise 6% wage increase yesterday, which the unions said would be sufficient to get their members back to work today.

The agreement, which is due to be signed this morning, ends a strike that cost the national carrier millions of rands in lost revenue, and saw employees forfeiting a week's wages.

However, SAA passengers can still expect delays on domestic routes while international and regional flights will remain grounded until tomorrow.

The United Association of SA (Uasa), which represents the majority of SAA's cabin crew and ground staff, said yesterday that "operations should be running smoothly again by Friday".

Uasa and the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (Satawu) had initially demanded an 8% wage increase. The airline had offered 5%.

In terms of the new deal, all employees will receive a 6% salary increase. Negotiations late on Tuesday night also saw SAA agreeing to a 5% increase in medical aid and housing contributions, as well as an additional 1% nonpensionable adjustment.

Uasa transport sector manager Gerhard Ueckermann claimed a victory for employees, saying: "Although we were not entirely happy with it â-oe the leadership of the union felt it to be the responsible thing to do and in the best interest of all concerned to recommend the acceptance thereof to the members."

He attributed the resolution to intervention by Labour Minister Membathisi Mdladlana and the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration.

SAA declined to comment on the details of the agreement.

However, SAA spokesman Onkgopotse Tabane said yesterday that SAA welcomed "the movement towards a resolution of the current impasse and is happy with the progress made so far".

Last night Satawu said it was still awaiting a response from its members as to whether or not to accept the revised offer, but initial indications were that they, too, would accept.

Ueckermann said the "devastating strike" was a "very expensive lesson on how not to conduct wage negotiations".

"SAA management initially painted a very gloomy picture of the company's affordability to pay, only to announce handsome profits after deadlock had been declared," he said.

Source: AllAfrica.Com

URL: http://allafrica.com/stories/200507280067.htm...

Racism, Guilt, Self-Hatred & Self-Deceit: An amazing book by an American academic who lived in Africa for over 30 years Umkhonto we Sizwe - Fighting for a Divided Nation Warfare by Other Means - amazing research on South Africa in the 1980s and 1990s Robin Art Straight Talk: The CIA Series: The History of CIA intervention in South Africa: How the CIA ended Apartheid & installed Nelson Mandela in power  
There are no Readers' Comments for this article