Taking COSATU Today Forward, 6 October 2025 #HappyBirthdaySADTU #Cosatu@40 #Cosatu40thAnniversary

46 views
Skip to first unread message

Norman Mampane

unread,
Oct 6, 2025, 4:11:27 AMOct 6
to cosatu-d...@googlegroups.com, cosatu-d...@gmail.com, Khanyisile Fakude, Alfred Mafuleka, Babsy Nhlapo, Zingi...@gmail.com, Dibuseng Pakose, Dolly Ngali, Gert...@cosatu.org.za, Jabulile Tshehla, Nhlanhla Ngwenya, Nthabiseng Moloi, Tshidi Makhathini, Bongani Masuku, masukub...@gmail.com, Freda Oosthuysen, Khaliphile Cotoza, Kopano Konopi, Louisa Nxumalo, Matthew Parks, Mkhawuleli Maleki, Monyatso Mahlatsi, Mph...@cosatu.org.za, nts...@cosatu.org.za, Patience Lebatlang, phi...@cosatu.org.za, Ruth Mosiane, Solly Phetoe, Thabo Mokoena, Thandi Makapela, Thokozani Mtini, Toeki Kgabo, Tony Ehrenreich, wel...@cosatu.org.za, Zingiswa Losi, Norman Mampane, Donald Ratau, Fi...@cosatu.org.za, Sis...@cosatu.org.za, Edwin Mkhize, Gerald Twala, Sizwe Pamla, Abel Tlhole Pitso, tam...@cosatu.org.za, Tshepo Mabulana, Gosalamang Jantjies, Mpheane Lepaku, Lebogang Mulaisi, Jan Mahlangu, Thabo Mahlangu, James Mhlabane, Paul Bester, Benoni Mokgongoana, Moji Matabane, Parks, Mampane External, Malvern de Bruyn, Orapeleng Moraladi, Mich...@nehawu.org.za, thi...@saccawu.org.za, Louisa Thipe, Itumeleng Molatlhegi, Nelly Masombuka, Matimu Shivalo, Emanuel Mooketsi, Sihle Dlomo, Collins Matsepe, kamo...@cosatu.org.za, nom...@cosatu.org.za, Sonia Mabunda-Kaziboni, Kabelo Kgoro, Mzoli Xola, Boitumelo Molete, Mongezi Mbelwane, Zimasa Ziqubu, Ntombizodwa Pooe, Kgaladi Makuwa, Tengo Tengela, siya.mg...@gmail.com, Nonzuzo Dlamini, Cleopatra Kakaza, Denise Gaorwe, Daniel Itumeleng Moloantoa, Noxolo Bhengu, Avela Sipamla, Kholu Mopeli, Lesego Ndaba, Mpho Tshikalange, Lelethu Faku, Sifiso Xaba, Nomazwazi Tshabalala, Amogelang Diale, Mulalo Murudi, Sekete Moshoeshoe, Baba Mafuleka, Bernard Hlakole, Tanya Van Meelis, Zanele Sabela, Karabo Letebele, TIISETSO MAHLATSI, Amahle Zilani, Simphiwe Matshabane, Themba Mkhize, Qhama Zondani, Letlhogonolo Dire, OMPHULUSA MAMBURU

 

COSATU TODAY

#HappyBirthdaySADTU

Tomorrow, it’s #WorldDayforDecentWork

#Cosatu40Anniversary celebration events are taking place in provinces….

#Cosatu@40

#Cosatu40thAnniversary

#SACTU70

#ClassStruggle

“Build Working Class Unity for Economic Liberation towards Socialism”

#Back2Basics

#JoinCOSATUNow

#ClassConsciousness

Taking COSATU Today Forward

‘Whoever sides with the revolutionary people in deed as well as in word is a revolutionary in the full sense’-Maoo

 

A group of people outside a building

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Our side of the story

6 October 2025


“Build Working Class Unity for Economic Liberation towards Socialism”

Organize at every workplace and demand respect for labour rights Now!

Defend Jobs Now!

Join COSATU NOW!

 

Contents                      

  • Workers Parliament: Back to Basics!
  • NEHAWU Limpopo to convene 80th anniversary celebration of WFTU
  • COSATU Draft Deployment List for International Decent Workday – 7th October 2025
  • COSATU to host lectures in the lead up to 40th anniversary
  • South Africa
  • COSATU Provinces to host International Decent Work Day activities on 7 October
  • SADTU Statement on World Teachers’ Day, 5 October 2025
  • SACP Red October Campaign 2025–2026 launching statement-Seventy years of the Freedom Charter: Deepening the struggle for its unfulfilled goals
  • International-Workers’ Solidarity!
  • IndustriALL and IF Metall mark 10 years of landmark global framework agreement with H&M Group

Workers’ Parliament-Back2Basics  

COSATU Draft Deployment List for International Decent Workday – 7th October 2025

Summary of Activity on the National Day of Action per Province                 

Province

Activity

Start place and time

Venue where Memorandum will be served

Western Cape

March

Assembly point: Hanovor Street, next to CPUT E-learning, Cape town: 08:00 -10:00

To Western Cape Provincial Legislature and 

City of Cape Town

Free State

March

Thabo Nkoane Circle in kgotsong   Assembly point: starting at 9h00

Handover the memorandum to

Nala Municipality (Bothaville)

Eastern Cape

March (centralised)

Assembly Point is the Bisho Massacre Memorial

Handover the memorandum to Buffalo City

Gauteng

March

Assembly point: Tembisa Hospital

 

Assembly point: COSATU House

 

Assembly point: Marabastad Old Putco Depo

Handover the memorandum to Tembisa Police Station (SAPS),

 

 

Handover the memorandum to Game Store and Premier’s Office

 

 

Handover the memorandum to National Treasury, Employment and Labour, Salga and CCMA

KwaZulu Natal

March

Assembly  Nkosi Dinuzulu Park

Starting time: 11h00

Handover the memorandum Government SOEs and Employers

Limpopo

March

Assembly point: Potgietersrus Comprehensive School 

Handover the memorandum Mogalakwena Municipality (Mokopane)

 

Northwest

March

Assembly point: Montshiwa Stadium

Handover the memorandum to Provincial Legislature

 


Mpumalanga

March

SACTWU

Assembly point: Thakasile Farm

SACCAWU

Assembly point: Old show ground (Nelspruit)

 

 

Assembly point: ANC Office (Piet Retief)

 

 

Handover a memorandum to: Twiggy Timber Gate in Ngodwana,

 

Handover the memorandum to:

Spar DC,

Shoprite,

Pick n Pay in Nelspruit

Handover memorandum to PG Bison company

 

_________________________

NEHAWU Limpopo to convene 80th anniversary celebration of WFTU

Moses Maubane, NEHAWU Limpopo Provincial Secretary, October 05, 2025

The National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union [NEHAWU] in Limpopo will on Tuesday 07th October convene an International Seminar to celebrate the 80th Anniversary of the World Federation of Trade Unions [WFTU].

The celebration will pay tribute to all gallant founders, all generations of leaders and members who have contributed in building this international class-oriented federation.

The celebration will take the form of a lecture on the history of the WFTU, especially the role played by WFTU in both international and domestic workers struggles, the growth of WFTU throughout the years and victories won defending the rights of the workers and the working class, opposing capitalist exploitation and struggling against imperialist domination.

The lecture will be addressed by NEHAWU General Secretary, Comrade Zola Saphetha. Fraternal organisations and alliance partners [ANC, SACP and COSATU] will deliver messages of support in the event.

Details of the WFTU 80th Anniversary Celebration:

Date: Tuesday 07th October 2025

Time: 10H00

Venue: Limpopo Department of Health –Auditorium, Polokwane.

Members of the media are invited to attend and to cover this event.            

END

Issued by NEHAWU Limpopo Secretariat Office      

_________________________

COSATU to host lectures in the lead up to 40th anniversary

Zanele Sabela, COSATU National Spokesperson, 25 September 2025

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) is set the host a series of lectures in the lead up to its 40th anniversary celebration at Dobsonville Stadium on 6 December.

 

The culmination of four years of unity talks, COSATU came into being on 1 December 1985, and brought together 33 competing unions and federations opposed to apartheid and whose common goal was to bring about a non-racial, non-sexist and democratic society.

 

The Federation has been at the forefront of advancing, defending and protecting the interests and rights of workers since, and has led in the formation of the country’s progressive labour laws including workers’ rights to form trade unions, collective bargaining and to strike, minimum conditions of service, National Minimum Wage, etc.

 

From its vehement resistance of apartheid to the ushering in of the democratic dispensation and improving the economic and social wellbeing of the working class 31 years post democracy, COSATU has stood the test of time.

 

In the lead up to its 40th anniversary in December, the Federation will host a variety of activities starting with a series of lectures by its National Office Bearers.

 

The lectures will tackle diverse subjects from COSATU’s pivotal role in gender struggles to the strike that broke the back of industry-wide exploitative labour practices as far back as 1959.  

 

Province: Mpumalanga
Date:
16 October
Venue: Ikhethelo Secondary School, Bethal     

Topic: Gert Sibande Potato Boycott      

Main Speaker: Duncan Luvuno, COSATU 2nd Deputy President

Province: Northern Cape
Date:
30 October   

Topic: COSATU and the Liberation Movement

Main Speaker: Solly Phetoe, COSATU General Secretary

Province: North-West
Date:
19 November

Topic: Strengthening Industrial Unions to build a militant COSATU        

Main Speaker: Duncan Luvuno, COSATU 2nd Deputy President

Province: Eastern Cape
Date:
20 November

Topic: COSATU and the Reconfiguration of the Alliance      

Main Speaker: Mike Shingange, COSATU 1st Deputy President

Province: Gauteng
Date:
21 November

Topic: COSATU and the Mass Democratic Movement 

Main Speaker: Zingiswa Losi, COSATU President 

 

Issued by COSATU

South Africa


COSATU Provinces to host International Decent Work Day activities on 7 October

Zanele Sabela, COSATU National Spokesperson, 5 October 2025 

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) will lead various activities across provinces to mark International Day for Decent Work on Tuesday, 7 October.

 

This year’s action is doubly significant as the Federation is set to celebrate its 40th anniversary on 6 December at Dobsonville Stadium and comes on the heels of the 80th anniversary of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) on 3 October.

 

In its 40 years of existence, COSATU has been at the forefront of advancing, defending and protecting the rights and interests of workers with the aim of improving their working and living conditions.

 

Counted among the gains workers have garnered because of the Federation’s relentless efforts are the right to form a trade union and participate in collective bargaining, the right to strike, the right to safe working conditions, protection against discrimination, access to dispute resolution including CCMA, maternity and parental leave benefits, etc.

 

Despite the hard-won gains over the last four decades, workers are still confronted by crippling economic challenges including joblessness, poverty and inequality. The South African economy hasn’t grown beyond 1% for years, while unemployment is alarmingly high at 42.9%, and harrowing among youth aged 15 to 24 at more than 72%. Yet, companies including Glencore, ArcelorMittal, Ford, Coca-Cola and SABC to name just a few are still intent on retrenching workers. COSATU is committed to supporting the unions who represent workers in these and other companies as they fight to defend jobs. We will also continue to push the Department of Employment and Labour to ensure the Unemployment Insurance Fund is fit for purpose to ensure workers are provided a safety net should they lose their jobs and that companies in distress are afforded relief via the Employer/Employee Temporary Relief Scheme to safeguard workers’ jobs. So too should the Compensation Fund be able to meet workers' needs when they fall sick, are injured or if they pass away at work, their families should be compensated.

 

COSATU’s opposition to government’s neoliberal policies is well-documented. During its National Day of Action which coincided with WFTU’s 80th anniversary, COSATU Affiliate, the National Education, Health, and Allied Workers Union (NEHAWU) highlighted the critical vacancies in the health and education sectors due to government’s austerity budget.

 

As we head towards the Mid-Term Budget Policy Statement in November, the Federation calls on Finance Minister, Enoch Godongwana, to be bold and chart a progressive budget that will resource the state to provide public and municipal services that the economy needs to shake off its lethargy, stimulate growth and attack unemployment.

 

Delivering the message of support at COSATU’s recent Central Committee, President Cyril Ramaphosa said government would begin the process of insourcing some of the services that were previously outsourced.

 

This was repeated by Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister, Velenkosini Hlabisa, at the Local Government Indaba last week. This is welcome news to the Federation as it will stimulate employment and have the added benefit of tempering tender-related corruption.

 

In light of the shocking revelations flowing from the Special Investigating Unit’s report on Tembisa Hospital, COSATU in Gauteng will deliver a memorandum to the local hospital on Tuesday to reiterate the devasting impact the looting of the more than R2 billion from the institution has had on patients and healthcare workers.

 

The Federation will also emphasise the need to protect whistleblowers considering the fate that befell Babita Deokaran when she discovered the looting spree.

 

Also worrying are the rising levels of impunity displayed by those alleged to be involved in wrongdoing. For instance, the Government Pensions Administration Agency paid an investigator to hunt down staff who blew the whistle on the billion Rand lease of a non-existent building.     

 

COSATU counts securing the National Minimum Wage (NMW) among its proudest achievements as it responded to a call by the Freedom Charter. Since coming into effect in 2019, the NMW has lifted 6 million vulnerable workers including farm, domestic, construction, security, cleaning and hospitality workers out of poverty. However, enforcement remains a priority given a recently released report found nearly 40% of domestic workers were paid less than the NMW.

 

This is an indictment considering the ever-rising cost of living, which makes it near impossible for workers to afford life’s necessities, plunging them further into debt. It is crucial for employers to acknowledge the NMW is the floor and that they need to pay workers more if they are to meet their basic needs.

 

COSATU will soon embark on a living wage campaign, during which it will advocate for workers to be paid twice the NMW.  

 

The Federation will also continue its unwavering support for government led by the ANC, as it forges ahead with preparations to implement the National Health Insurance even as it is inundated by multiple legal challenges initiated by Organised Business.

 

In terms of occupational health and safety, COSATU endeavours to expand the definition to include security and dignity, particularly when it comes to gender-based violence and harassment of which women workers carry the heaviest burden.

 

Check the COSATU website for full details of provincial activities on 7 October.

 

Issued by COSATU

___________________

SADTU Statement on World Teachers’ Day

5 October 2025

Dr. Mugwena Maluleke, SADTU General Secretary, 05 October 2025

Theme: Recasting teaching as a collaborative profession”

On October5, the South African Democratic Teachers’ Union (SADTU) joins the world in celebrating World Teachers’ Day. SADTU honours not only the teachers of today but the generation of educators and knowledge keepers who came before us. From the fireside storytellers who carried wisdom through oral tradition, to the freedom fighters who taught under trees and in secret classrooms.

 

Our profession has always been rooted in collective struggle, shared purpose, and ancestral legacy.

Today, as the world gathers under the theme Recasting teaching as a collaborative profession, ”we affirm that teaching has never been a solitary act. It is a heritage of togetherness, a covenant between teacher and student, community, and society-past and future.

First celebrated in 1994, this day was established by UNESCO and Education International (EI) to recognise and celebrate the role teachers play in providing education and shaping society. It also serves to highlight the challenges teachers face, advocates for their rights and promote the ILO/UNESCO Recommendations Concerning the Status of Teachers.

Teaching has never been a solo act, but it is a sacred inheritance passed from generation to generation. On this World Teachers Day, we honour our ancestors who taught in struggle and solidarity, and we call for a future where every teacher thrives through collaboration.
From the fire side to the classroom, teaching is a collective endeavour. Today’s educators must be supported by systems that value teamwork, shared wisdom, and sustained public investment.
Let us recast teaching as a profession of unity, dignity, and transformation. Because when teachers stand together, societies rise together.
As we celebrate this day and honour teachers, we note with concern a recent study by the Stellenbosch University which found that half of South Africa’s teachers are contemplating abandoning the profession because of the unbearable conditions under which they work. They are overwhelmed by too many administrative tasks, overcrowded classrooms, inadequate mental health support, threats of violence from the learners and increasing ill-discipline among learners. We commend them for their resilience and dedication despite these challenges and urge them not to give up. As a Union, we remain committed to fighting for the improvement of their working conditions and ensuring they have a voice in shaping the profession.
We call on government to ensure adequate funding for school infrastructure and to employ more teachers to eliminate overcrowded classrooms; employers to provide psychosocial support to protect teachers’ mental wellbeing; and parents, communities, and learners to play their part in creating safe and conducive environments for teachers to do their work.
Further, there is a need for a thorough engagement with institutions of higher learning on the development of teachers and on the kind of a teacher we need from these institutions.
When all stakeholders, “collaborate” to support teachers, teaching and learning will thrive-ensuring a brighter future for our nation. We call for this unity because the future depends on educated learners, and teachers are the key drivers of education.
We further urge teachers to uphold the dignity of this noble profession by conducting themselves in a manner that commands respect. Despite the challenges, we call on them to continue being in class on time, prepared, teaching, respecting the dignity of all learners and refrain from having sexual relations with learners.
ISSUEDBY: SADTU Secretariat

___________________

SACP Red October Campaign 2025–2026 launching statement-Seventy years of the Freedom Charter: Deepening the struggle for its unfulfilled goals

Delivered by Thulas Nxesi, SACP Deputy National Chairperson, 5 October 2025

Dear comrades, we officially launch the Red October Campaign 2025–2026, guided by the objectives of advancing the struggle to achieve the unfulfilled goals of the Freedom Charter in its 70th year, the 31st year of our hard-won April 1994 democratic breakthrough. The objectives include the following.

1. Strengthening the struggle to realise the Freedom Charter’s unfulfilled goals, including ensuring the people share in the country’s wealth to eradicate poverty, radically reduce inequality and reverse uneven development.

2. Implement the National Health Insurance to guarantee access to quality healthcare for all.

3. Building safe and secure living environments by strengthening the fight and capacity against crime, corruption and social decay.

4. Advancing land ownership transformation through restitution, redistribution, tenure security and state support, including productive equipment and technology, inputs and technical capacity – It is in this context that the SACP is pressing ahead with the campaign for a referendum to finally resolve the unresolved land question and ensure land justice.

5. Rolling back neo-liberal policy dominance, including privatisation, strengthening state-owned enterprises and reclaiming key strategic sectors, including energy, water, transport, the ports, and communications.

6. Addressing the catastrophic unemployment crisis by advancing policies for broad-based industrialisation, promoting collective worker empowerment and challenging casualisation, labour brokering, outsourcing and other exploitative practices while creating large-scale sustainable employment.

7. Promoting public ownership of strategic sectors and advancing the campaign for a universal social security system, including the transformation of the Social Relief of Distress Grant and its improvement to form the basis for a universal income grant.

8. Building people’s power through grassroots organisation, co-operatives and initiatives such as the People’s Red Caravan, strengthening rural and township economies.

9. Advancing and deepening the struggle for gender equality and against gender-based violence in everything we do.

10. Uniting the working class, trade unions, youth and civic movements, women’s organisations, progressive traditional leaders in a common struggle for social and economic emancipation.

This year we are dedicating the Red October Campaign to the 70th anniversary of the Freedom Charter. We celebrate the historic victories won through struggle, most notably the April 1994 democratic breakthrough against apartheid, and we want to strengthen the struggle to realise the Charter’s unfulfilled goals.

These goals include ensuring that the people share in the country’s wealth, the only way we can eradicate poverty, radically reduce inequality and roll back uneven development.

We return to the Charter’s unfulfilled goals, which include the implementation of the National Health Insurance to ensure access to quality healthcare for all, and building an environment for everyone to enjoy dignity in a safe and secure living environment. This requires that we bring down the high rates of crime and corruption in all their manifestations.

The SACP insists the commission probing the capture of authorities within the criminal justice system finish its work and deliver clear outcomes.

Those outcomes must help the country strike a deadly blow against crime and corruption.

In reflecting on the Freedom Charter, especially the struggle to achieve its unfulfilled goals, we also celebrate the democratic victory of 1994 against the apartheid regime. The transition from the apartheid regime was not a gift. It was an outcome of a long and bitter liberation struggle, led by our movement, fought for by the masses of our people.

The April 1994 democratic breakthrough marked the end of colonial and apartheid regimes and opened the democratic dispensation, paving the way for real gains for millions, especially the workers and poor.

Before April 1994, the right to vote was a privilege of a white minority. Colonial and apartheid regimes built a better life for the minority by dispossessing, super exploiting and impoverishing the black majority, of whom the majority was, and still is, the working class.

For the first time as a direct fruit of the April 1994 democratic breakthrough, millions of the previously oppressed gained access to political, social and economic rights.

This brought progress in health, education, houses for the poor, household electrification, water supply and other tangible benefits that had been deliberately denied under racist oppression.

Others, as they gained access to better work opportunities, built themselves better homes, including in rural areas.

The SACP itself has a proud history. From its pre-history of opposition to the imperialist First World War starting in 1914, to its launch as the Communist Party of South Africa in 1921, our Party has played a decisive role in the liberation struggle, in the 1994 democratic breakthrough and in the advances realised by millions, thousands and hundreds since.

Our fight against the dangerous tendency of HIV–AIDS denialism is one such example, in which we continued the struggle towards all the goals of the Freedom Charter post-1994 while some concluded they were free at last and argued that the struggle was no longer necessary.

Against resistance, we led the campaign for HIV treatment as part of the broader struggle for the right to life through quality healthcare. This mass struggle saved lives, improved life expectancy and stopped the tide of needless deaths.

We must be even more frank. While important progress has been made, we remain far from the Freedom Charter’s vision.

This is one reason the struggle must continue in the here and now. We must advance, deepen and intensify this struggle, an indispensable part of the national democratic revolution.

For example, the majority of arable and well-located land is still controlled by a minority of the capitalist commercial farmers, mining houses, property developers, hospitality and tourism bosses. This translated to 72 per cent of land remaining in the hands of a small white capitalist minority.

Restitution, redistribution and tenure reforms have been weak, not achieving the goals of the Freedom Charter on division of land among those who work it.

Many of the few beneficiaries of land reform have been abandoned under austerity. About 5,400 restitution claims unresolved and hunger stalks millions.

The Charter called for all land to be re-divided among those who work it, with state support through implements, seed and dams. Translated into today’s terms, this means productive equipment and technology, inputs and infrastructure.

Considering what the Freedom Charter says about education, including technical and vocational education, support for productive land use must include technical capacity building.

The Freedom Charter declared that the mineral wealth, banks and monopoly industries shall be transferred to the ownership by the people. Yet these commanding heights remain in private hands, tied to global finance.

Notably, 31 years into our democratic dispensation, there is still not a single state bank that serves the people’s financial and development needs.

The minerals of our land generate enormous value, but this is converted into profits for capitalist bosses. Communities and workers are left with little more than poverty wages.

The nation is left with meagre royalties and inadequate development projects from the mine owners’ social and labour plans. In material terms, in value form the lion’s share of our minerals is transferred to the capitalist exploiters as their profit through the current regime of mining licences.

It does not belong to the people, despite claims to the contrary, based on the text of the Minerals and Petroleum Resources Development Act.

It is important to recognise the truth in pursuit of our struggle.

This at the time when neo-liberal austerity has further entrenched capitalist power. State-owned enterprises have been deliberately weakened. In energy, Eskom was undermined through state capture and restructuring to create space for the private power producers called independent power producers.

The state guaranteed their projects, shifting risks to the people.

In air transport, SAA was nearly collapsed to make way for private airlines. It was almost gifted to private owners as part of privatisation.

The agenda to channel social grant payments to commercial banks is part and parcel of privatisation.

In the neo-liberal playbook, it is part of the agenda to weaken public entities, in this regard the Post Office and the Post Bank, and to eventually collapse them in favour of competition between private sector interests.

Privatisation today is not only about selling state assets. It includes weakening state capacity, outsourcing the roles of the government in service provision and handing public goods over to private profit interests.

In infrastructure such as electricity, rail, ports, water and telecommunications, neo-liberal reforms have opened the door for monopoly or dominant sections of capital.

The auctioning of high radio spectrum under the pretext of de-monopolising the ICT sector has entrenched the duopoly of Vodacom and MTN.

The two captured the lion’s share of the high radio frequency spectrum, a national asset.

The right and duty to work

The Freedom Charter said there shall be work and security.

Yet today unemployment is catastrophic. Exploitation has deepened.

The workers’ share of income from production and trade has fallen.

Still, the workers receive no cent from the profits appropriated by the capitalist bosses. Outsourcing, out-contracting, casualisation, labour brokering, perpetual temporary employment relationships, are among the strategies through which the exploitation of workers by the capitalist bosses has deepened.

Instead of sharing in the country’s wealth, the working class is locked out while class inequality deepens, including in its racial and gender dimensions.

A handful of capitalists continue to accumulate vast riches while millions are left in poverty.

No one is rich on behalf of the rest. Everyone in the few who are rich or empowered at the expense of the rest is rich privately.

Increasingly, the alienation of the masses is expressed in voter abstention.

This is not apathy but a conscious rejection of a system that excludes them.

The SACP will not blame the people. Emerging from the recent Plenary of our Central Committee, from which the perspectives we outline today were discussed, we will intensify grassroots organising, rebuild principled struggle and drive programmes that meet material needs.

Our democratic dispensation must NOT follow the failed path of capitalist exploitation of the majority of the people. In the period ahead, we must define breaking with exploitation and advancing a revolutionary transformation led by an organised and militant working class.

Our country is facing multiple crises: high levels of unemployment, poverty, inequality, crime and corruption, and a social reproduction crisis.

To be sure, the crises we face cannot be reduced to legacies of apartheid or state capture alone.

They are systemic, rooted in a capitalist system that survives on inequality and the appropriation of wealth produced by the majority. Neo-liberal policies, post-1994 dating back to GEAR, are embedded with factors that underpin and sustain these crises.

Under the capitalist system, wealth is produced collectively by workers but appropriated privately by capitalists.

As Karl Marx observed, wealth at one pole always comes with misery at the other.

The SACP has consistently rejected neo-liberal policies.

SACP to independently contest 2026 local government elections

In economic and social policy terms, the SACP will contest the 2026 local government elections to fight neo-liberal policies that have hollowed out and still hollow out municipalities through outsourcing and privatisation.

The struggle against capitalist exploitation and neo-liberalism must take place on all fronts and significant centres of power, including in election contests.

Instead of a reconfigured Alliance, coalitions with neo-liberal, right-wing parties opposed to the national democratic revolution and the Freedom Charter have been prioritised.

In political policy terms, the SACP will contest the 2026 local government elections to address the crisis of working-class representation that has emerged in the absence of a reconfigured Alliance.

It is ironic that some of those who say they disagree with the resolution by the SACP to contest the elections are the very ones embracing and even defending coalitions with neo-liberal, right-wing electoral parties opposed to the national democratic revolution and the Freedom Charter.

Communists cannot abandon the electoral terrain to the class enemy and its political agents amid a crisis of working-class representation. As Lenin warned in “Left-Wing” Communism: An Infantile Disorder, to refuse to contest elections is to leave the masses under the influence of the bourgeoisie and its agents.

Elections, even under conditions shaped by capitalism, provide a platform to expose the ruling class, to reach millions with revolutionary ideas through campaigning and to organise workers for struggle beyond the ballot. Contesting elections is therefore not an end in itself, but a tactical consideration in the broader political struggle to build working-class power, deepen the national democratic revolution and open the road to socialism.

The SACP will therefore contest the 2026 local government elections not for narrow electoralist ambitions, but to defend, advance and deepen the national democratic revolution as the most direct road towards socialism. We reject the assertion that seeks to divorce the national democratic revolution from socialism and compartmentalise them into unrelated positions.

This fatally flawed assertion also seeks to privatise the national democratic revolution, to convert it into a private property of only one organisation within the Alliance movement.

But when we say, “The People Shall Govern,” we mean more than casting a ballot every five years. We mean People’s Democracy – democracy that expands into every sphere of life: political power in the hands of the working-class majority; economic power through collective ownership of wealth and resources; social power where housing, health, water, education, electricity, and transport are guaranteed rights, not commodities.

This requires living organs of people’s power and self-governance, built from below such as community and civic forums to shape development; shop steward/worker councils to organise labour power; safety structures to protect communities from crime and violence; and co-operatives and people’s committees to manage production and services democratically.

Our electoral platform will therefore be rooted in working-class representation, reconfiguration of the Alliance on democratic and accountable terms, and the full pursuit of the Freedom Charter’s economic and social programme. This is crucial in the broader struggle to move towards socialism.

Crisis of unemployment a manifestation of the failure of neo-liberal policies

The unemployment crisis illustrates the failure of neo-liberal policies. Over 8.3 million people are unemployed, rising to 12.6 million if discouraged workers are included. This is not by accident but by design.

The neo-liberal shock therapy of rapid trade liberalisation under GEAR, the associated de-industrialisation and austerity, have had a destructive effect on productive sectors. Austerity undermined, among others, budgets for industrialisation and industrial policy incentives.

This policy scenario contributed to retrenchments and blocked efforts to create employment at the scale needed to overcome the unemployment crisis.

The shutdown of plants under ArcelorMittal will be remembered as clear proof that privatisation serves private profit, not the interests of the nation.

What became the privately-owned ArcelorMittal was once a state-owned enterprise, Iscor, and an ownership stake held by the Industrial Development Corporation, a public development finance institution. ArcelorMittal’s abuse of market dominance and monopolistic practices, including the import parity pricing model, along with the widespread retrenchments it has caused, must never be forgotten.

The productive capacity that ArcelorMittal has mothballed, shutdown or intends to close, and which can be restarted and recapitalised, must be renationalised.

The SACP pledges its solidarity with workers who faced retrenchments not only at ArcelorMittal or because of its actions, but also throughout the economy, including in mines, manufacturing sectors, construction and service sectors, to mention but a few.

We also stand in solidarity with their unions and families.

We reject the false claim that workers’ income causes unemployment.

This claim is a weapon of the capitalist class. The real cause of unemployment is a system that generates unemployment to keep wages low and profits high.

The SACP calls for radical structural transformation: broad-based industrialisation programme, public ownership of strategic sectors and a universal social security system.

Monetary policy must prioritise development, particularly industrialisation and the creation of maximum, sustainable employment, rather than narrow inflation targeting.

This approach is not reckless and has nothing in common with runaway inflation. Interest rates must serve the people and the economy, not the interests of the tiny minority of finance capital.

The People’s Red Caravan movement

The launch of this year’s Red October Campaign comes at a time when we have added a new dimension to our struggle for full economic and social emancipation.

The People’s Red Caravan is an inspiring expression of building people’s power with the working-class as the majority in action. In our villages, it shows that our people can feed themselves, organise co-operatives and rebuild their communities. It is not charity but a weapon of struggle.

The SACP reiterates its call on professionals, artisans and workers in every trade to join and strengthen the People’s Red Caravan movement.

While our work began in rural areas, we are now moving into townships and city centres that are now decaying under crime, corruption and neo-liberal policies.

We aim to rebuild township economies and revitalise and reclaim city centres, just as we are committed to building strong rural economies with and for the people.

The People’s Red Caravan is already bearing fruits. In Motlhabe, Matibidi, and other villages, Village Agricultural Co-operatives are organising communal farming, goats, vegetables, and orchards. In Matibidi, the Bareki Consumer Co-operative has grown from 21 to nearly 100 household owners in three months – proving collective power works and community self-reliance taking shape.

The Red October Campaign calls on the working class, trade unions, civic and youth movements, progressive faith-based bodies, women’s organisations and progressive traditional leaders to unite in struggle.

Together, we must break with the failed path of capitalism and its neo-liberal agenda and build people’s power to advance to full social and economic emancipation.

International solidarity

The SACP stands in solidarity with the people of Swaziland struggling for democracy and with the people of Western Sahara against the imperialist-backed occupation by Morocco.

We call for an immediate end to the war in Sudan.

The war has claimed at least 150,000 lives by conservative estimates, displaced nearly 13 million people and left 70 to 80 per cent of health facilities non-operational.

We reaffirm our solidarity with the people of Cuba and Venezuela against the aggression, illegal sanctions and blockade imposed by the imperialist United States. We strongly condemn the United States’ military encirclement of Venezuela not just as a provocation of war but also as an act of war.

We stand with the people of Palestine against the imperialist, United States-backed apartheid Israeli settler state and the ongoing genocide it is committing.

Since October 2023, Israel has killed over 66,000 Palestinians and injured more than 168,000, the majority being women, children and the elderly.

We reiterate our call for the leaders of the apartheid Israeli regime to be held accountable.

In the same vein, we strongly condemn the criminal interception and abduction of the humanitarian Global Sumud Flotilla by the Israeli regime.

The SACP stands in solidarity with the people of Palestine in their just struggle for national self-determination and the return of their dispossessed lands.

International-Solidarity   

IndustriALL and IF Metall mark 10 years of landmark global framework agreement with H&M Group

3 October, 2025

H&M Group, IndustriALL Global Union and IF Metall are celebrating ten years of their flagship global framework agreement (GFA), a pioneering collaboration to strengthen workers’ rights and social dialogue across the company’s global supply chain. 

Signed in 2015 and renewed in 2024, the GFA has helped empower workers and trade unions, prevent and resolve conflicts at factory level and improve conditions for thousands of garment workers worldwide. National Monitoring Committees (NMCs) from Bangladesh, Türkiye, Cambodia, India and Indonesia gathered in Stockholm to review progress, share best practices and strengthen protocols for dispute handling, factory access and collaboration. 

“Our global framework agreement with H&M has been continually developed since it was first signed ten years ago. It stands as a benchmark for sound industrial relations, which are essential for advancing living wages and decent working conditions in the industry. Yet nothing comes easily—both parties must continue working hard on this important journey toward justice for textile workers across H&M’s supply chain,”

says IndustriALL general secretary Atle Høie. 

Key achievements over the decade include:

Promotion of collective agreements at factory, company and industry level.

Protection of workers’ representatives from discrimination and support to carry out their roles.

Training for management and union representatives on workers’ rights, industrial relations, collective bargaining and conflict resolution.

Co-creation of a Gender-Based Violence and Harassment guideline with independent expert Jane Pillinger.

New Occupational Health and Safety Guideline for suppliers with input from IndustriALL and IF Metall.

Every year, H&M Group suppliers receive training on the GFA. This year, training at 326 tier-one manufacturing units to refresh the GFA’s scope and expectations.

Three new collective bargaining agreements, backed by H&M Group through the ACT process, were signed in Cambodia in 2025. These agreements resulted in increase wages and improved conditions. 

“This is one of our most important agreements in our supply chain, and one that I am deeply proud of. For ten years, we have built a strong, long-lasting collaboration that is delivering real, positive impact for thousands of garment workers every day. But it also shows that well-functioning industrial relations are the way forward to improving working conditions and wages in the countries where we source our products,”

says Leyla Ertur, chief sustainability officer for H&M Group. 

“We are proud to mark ten years of partnership through the global framework agreement. This milestone shows that global companies and trade unions can work together for lasting change. We know that strong social dialogue, including collective bargaining, is essential for achieving safe and fair working conditions in the textile and garment supply chain. Empowering workers and strengthening trade unions at the factory level is not just crucial – it is the foundation for sustainable progress,”

says Marie Nilsson, president of IF Metall and IndustriALL. 

______________________________

Norman Mampane (Shopsteward Editor)

Congress of South African Trade Unions

110 Jorissen Cnr Simmonds Street, Braamfontein, 2017

P.O.Box 1019, Johannesburg, 2000, South Africa

Tel: +27 11 339-4911 Direct line: 010 219-1348

 

 

Disclaimer: This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please notify the system manager. This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the individual named. If you are not the named addressee you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify the sender immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. If you are not the intended recipient you are notified that disclosing, copying, distributing or taking any action in reliance on the contents of this information is strictly prohibited.
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages