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South Africa Seeks Mine Peace, Wage Deal May Be Elusive

Feuding South African unions, platinum producer Lonmin and government officials tried on Wednesday to broker a peace accord at a mine wh...


Feuding South African unions, platinum producer Lonmin and government officials tried on Wednesday to broker a peace accord at a mine where 44 people were killed in the worst such violence since the end of apartheid.
They also want to use the meeting to start wage talks over the dispute that has paralysed production at Lonmin's Marikana mine and raised worries of unrest spreading through the country's platinum sector, further shaking the economy.

Bringing all the parties together to secure a symbolic peace deal could prove successful, but the strike at Lonmin's Marikana mine, northwest of Johannesburg, may be far tougher to resolve.
"If there is no 12,500 rand a month, no workers will be going back," Zolisa Bodlani, a representative for the striking workers, said ahead of the meeting.
Strikers say they have sacrificed too much to settle for less than their demands. Lonmin said it had an average 7.7 percent attendance across all shafts on Wednesday morning.
Participants were tight-lipped about the proceedings, saying they will speak when the time was right. Some expected the talks to stretch until at least Friday.
"You have to have patience. This is not going to be easy," said Nerine Kahn, national director for the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration.
The focus is on Lonmin and the unions to reach a deal but if the discussions drag on, pressure will mount on the government to resolve a conflict that has tarnished the country's reputation as a destination for foreign investment.
Mining operations at Lonmin, the world's third largest producer of platinum, have been effectively frozen for more than two weeks due to the labour strife, sending spot prices for the metal up and share prices for Lonmin down.
The 3,000 strikers are mostly rock driller operators, who the company says are paid about 9,800 rand with an average monthly bonus of 1,500 rand.
The killing of miners in the worst security incident since the end of apartheid in 1994 has steeled the resolve of strikers who see their dead comrades as martyrs and feel any compromise will be a sellout.
Thirty-four were killed in a hail of police gun fire. Ten people, including two police officers and two security guards, were hacked to death days earlier.
Many of the striking miners also do not have a recognised union bargaining on their behalf.
Many have moved to the camp of the upstart and militant Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU) and it is not clear who is representing who in all cases.
Some just wait in their shacks near the mine staying away until someone secures them a better deal.
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