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Fury at textile lay-offs
Article By:
Fri, 25 Jul 2008 11:19
Unions in Swaziland slammed a Chinese-owned textile company on
Thursday after it pushed ahead with plans to immediately lay off 3000
workers despite a court order that they be reinstated.
Managers of the Zheng Yong Textile factory in the town of Nhlangano
handed out new notices to the workforce telling them of the plant's
closure only days after the industrial court said they must give at
least 14 days' notice.
Unions had taken the company to the court when staff who reported
for work on Monday morning found that the plant had closed and hoped
the ruling would persuade the management to open negotiations.
"We successfully overturned the lay-off but it is disappointing that
the employer has now gone behind our back and issued another lay-off to
our members," Alex Fakudze, president of the Swaziland Manufacturing
and Allied Workers Union (Smawu), told AFP.
"The law is quite clear that permanent workers from textile
factories should be
given 14 days' notice before they can be laid off
but the employer is doing as he pleases."
Although no one from the company was available for comment, its
lawyers had argued in papers submitted to the industrial court that it
had been forced to retrench the workforce as it had run out of fabric
following May's massive earthquake in southwest China where the firm is
based.
Fakudze, whose organisation is to launch a formal complaint to the
labour commissioner, said there was no excuse for the company's
conduct.
"They may have valid reasons for the lay-off but their conduct
smacks of malice and they were not sincere in their conduct," he said.
"Why is one employer experiencing shortages of material while other
textile companies are working without any problems?"
Textile factories are one of the main employers in Swaziland, one of
the poorest countries in Africa, and complaints about low wages are
frequent.
Smawu
staged a strike earlier this year to push for better wages
with many workers earning only around 300 emalangeni ($40) a month.