President Cyril Ramaphosa has acknowledged mounting public frustration with South Africa’s leadership and institutions, two days after miners booed and drove him from a May Day celebration rally.
Ramaphosa, a mining union leader under white-minority rule, was forced offstage and taken to a police armoured personnel carrier after miners shouted him down.
The protest took place during a televised ceremony organised by country’s largest union, COSATU, at a stadium in the northwestern town of Rustenburg.
“I was… unable to address the gathering because workers there had grievances that they expressed loudly and clearly,” Ramaphosa said in a weekly newsletter.
“While the main grievance appeared to be about wage negotiations at nearby mines, the workers’ actions demonstrated a broader level of discontent.
“It reflects a weakening of trust in their union and (COSATU) federation as well as political leadership, including public institutions,” the president said.
Poverty, inequality and joblessness run high in South Africa, nearly three decades after the end of apartheid rule.
Ramaphosa promised to take “necessary action to improve (workers’) lives and their working conditions.”
Regrettably, COSATU — the Congress of South African Trade Unions — is a long-time close ally of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party.
It described the interference in Ramaphosa’s address as “regrettable and unacceptable” but said the protest “to a certain extent, reflects the growing frustration among workers in South Africa.”
South Africa is the continent’s leading economic power, but was hit hard by the Covid-19 crisis, and unemployment is at a record 35 percent.
Tension in the labour market has fuelled anti-foreigner sentiment and sporadic demonstrations.
Analysts believe South Africa’s political leadership has suffered a slump in trust among the public at every class level, and that the decline has persisted for more than a decade.
“The situation that Ramaphosa as a state president is facing, is similar to the one that was faced by Jimmy Carter around 1979 in the U.S. where people had lost complete confidence in state institutions and in the leadership cohort,” said Sandile Swana, an independent political analyst.
