Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • North Darfur displacement worsens as Sudan paramilitary tightens siege
  • Trump predicts Gaza ceasefire talks will go ‘very quickly’
  • Greta Thunberg “humiliated” by Israeli forces
  • Barcelona suffer shock defeat at Sevilla in La Liga
  • LIVE: Deadly attacks continue across Gaza; Egypt hosts Israel, Hamas teams
  • Governor slams ‘Trump’s invasion’ as troops deployed in Illinois
  • Australia, Papua New Guinea sign mutual defence treaty
  • More than 350 trekkers escape blizzard-hit Everest, hundreds still stranded
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,320
  • Israel strikes Gaza, killing 24 before Egypt talks on Trump ceasefire plan
  • Parents see tragedy, not fault, in Indonesia school collapse
  • Gov Newsom says Trump is sending California National Guard troops to Oregon
  • White House threatens mass layoffs amid deepening US government shutdown
  • Iran says nuclear cooperation with IAEA ‘no longer relevant’
  • Trump says US hit ‘drug boat’ off Venezuela, vows land crackdown next
  • Will Israel end its occupation of Palestinian territories?
  • India defeat Pakistan in Women’s Cricket World Cup to top points table
  • Contradictions in FIFA’s banning policies
  • Mass protests from Amsterdam to Istanbul denounce Israel’s Gaza genocide
  • More Gaza flotilla activists allege mistreatment in Israeli detention
  • UK police probe suspected arson attack on mosque as ‘hate crime’
  • Russell wins Singapore GP for Mercedes; McLaren secure constructors’ title
  • Why is ADL, the Jewish advocacy group, receiving blowback from MAGA?
  • Moldova’s vote is one more sign of Russia’s weakness in its ‘near abroad’
  • Video: Here’s how Syria is electing its first post-Assad parliament

In pictures: Marikana miners

By Al Jazeera Published 2012-09-05 16:12 Updated 2012-09-05 16:12 Source: Al Jazeera

Marikana, South Africa – Unrest in South Africa’s mining sector continues unabated.

On Wednesday, thousands took to the streets here in Marikana, in the country’s North West province, demanding a salary increase from Lonmin mines.

Undeterred by the shooting and killing of 34 miners by police on August 16 – and evidently energised by the release of some 270 of their workmates from prison on Monday – miners marched through Marikana to an assembly point adjacent to the Wonderkop hill outside the town to state their demands.

Wielding knobkerries and clubs, and chanting the names of miners who lost their lives on a day that has become known as the “Marikana massacre”, workers shuffled through the streets, under the watchful eye of police and scores of onlookers – many of whom had shut their stores in the town.

Negotiations between management, union leadership and government have continued, with little success, with workers remaining resolute over their demands over a salary hike close to 300 per cent. Strikes also spread to other mines, most notably the Gold Fields mine, close to Johannesburg, raising the alarm that the unrest could spread to mines across the country.

Marikana itself, a mining town close to the city of Rustenburg, has been hit hard by the protracted strike.

Experts say if the strike is not resolved by Friday, Lonmin might have to shed its high cost operations. Already, Lonmin’s shares have lost 15 per cent since the events of August 16.

And if Wednesday’s march is anything to go by, miners are not yet ready to pick up their tools and return to work.