Johannesburg - Newly-formed trade union, the Liberated Metalworkers Union of South Africa (Limusa), on Tuesday said it was taking Toyota South Africa (Toyota SA) and the National Union of Metalworkers (Numsa) to the CCMA following a dispute about worker representation at the Durban plant.
Credit: AP
A visitor photographs a vehicle inside a Toyota showroom in Tokyo, Japan. Picture: Shizuo Kambayashi, APLimusa's secretary, Cedric Gina, in a statement on Tuesday, said the organisational rights dispute had been going on for over a year. Gina said Toyota SA and Numsa had been involved in several attempts to block Limusa from representing the interest of its members and denying them their constitutional right of freedom of association.
“This dispute has exposed the continuing desperate alliance between Toyota SA and Numsa which has now came out in the open on broad daylight. Metalworkers should know that it is now on record that the former red union [Numsa] has applied on this case to be side by side with the employer to refuse other workers their rights to join the union of their choice,” Gina said.
An affiliate of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu), Limusa was seen as a replacement for Numsa after the latter was expelled from Cosatu last year following accusations of bringing the trade union federation into disrepute.
Gina said they were confident that “no amount of desperate collaborations will deter metalworkers from defending their hard earned rights”.
The matter will be heard in Durban on April 19.
African News Agency