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DESCRIPTION:Nine Executive union members of the Mineworkers Union of Namibia  Rossing 
 Branch were fired  September 2020 by the  Chinese National Nuclear 
 Corporation (CNNC) Rossing Uranium Limited which wanted them to give 
 healthcare concessions, give-backs and also allow the Chinese workers to be 
 brought in outside the contract and labor laws  undermining the conditions 
 and benefits of Namibian workers.\nThe arbitration hearing on this illegal 
 discharge of the entire union leadership will be held on October 27, 2021 
 in Nambia.\nPlease issue a statement calling for the rehiring of the fired 
 Namibian Mine Workers Union Rossing Branch and call on the Chinese National 
 Nuclear Corporation (CNNCC) and Chinese President Xi-Jinping To take action 
 to return these union leaders to their jobs and to end the union 
 busting.\n\nSolidarity Movement for the Unfairly Dismissed Branch Executive 
 Committee of Namibia Mine Workers Union Rossing Branch\n\nWe reach out to 
 you our brothers and sisters,fellow workers and comrades across all corners 
 of the world to stand with us in solidarity against victimization, 
 intimidation, abuse of powers and employers that don’t follow the labor 
 laws and legislation of the country. The management of Rossing Uranium Ltd. 
 Is one of those employers that did so on the 29th September 2020 when they 
 decided to unlawfully and unprocedurally dismiss the entire branch 
 executive committee of 9 employees in their individual capacities for 
 allegations they claim we apparently acted as a unit and for being part of 
 the branch executive committee making this an attack on the Union. We 
 condemn this cowardly acts because not only have they violated the Namibian 
 Constitution, the Labour Act 11 of 2007, the Procedural (Recognition) 
 Agreement of 14th November 1988 but they have infringed on the very rights 
 our forefathers gave us through the birth of independence and through 
 various great strikes of workers. The birth of the Mine Workers Union of 
 Namibia (MUN) was at Rossing Uranium Ltd in the 1970’s and most of the 
 Union leaders elected in office will attest to this, “from the very first 
 day you become a Union Leader at Rossing Uranium Branch, its like the 
 spirits of our forefathers come over you and guide you in everything you do 
 with only one goal and that is to work for the people’’.\n\nSince we 
 took up office in 2017 we made it our aim to stand up for workers right; to 
 stop any violations from the company; to built sound labour relations with 
 the company; to educate and train our members on company 
 policies,agreements and conditions of employment; to expose criminal 
 activities and never compromise anything. The Rossing Uranium management 
 wrote letters with intensions of renegotiating our conditions of employment 
 to worse off conditions on a number of occasions but we reminded them that 
 those condition did not come on a silver platter and that the Labour Act of 
 Namibia says that an employer cannot change an existing condition to a 
 worse off one and if there is a dispute on a condition of employment the 
 condition that is better off prevails. This frustrated the management, who 
 threatened to remove the Union office, branch chairperson’ full-time 
 office and boardroom on site in an effort to disable and sabotage Union 
 activities of the branch executive committee. They further started 
 targeting Union leaders ( the regional chairperson, the general secretary 
 and a former national president of the Union) with a price tag on their 
 heads to start plotting against us. It was the general secretary and the 
 regional chairperson of MUN that betrayed us through a letter they wrote to 
 the company saying that the branch did not have authority to appoint a 
 lawyer to act on the branch’ behalf of which the MUN Constitution says 
 otherwise, the sad story is the company has the audacity to ask the 
 national office whether the branch had permission or not, and a Union 
 member of MUN is a juridical person and the Rossing Uranium Ltd is a 
 juridical person and neither persons have authority over the other on how 
 each runs their affairs. \n\nThis dismissal have affected not us but our 
 family, extended family and the community we serve emotionally; physically 
 and financially as we were dismissed for standing up for the workers rights 
 and conditions, the employers are doing what they want because they have 
 the financial muscles do what they want and if they get any resistance from 
 anyone they deal with them any way they see fit. We have each worked an 
 average of more than 10 years for Rossing Uranium Ltd and some of us our 
 fathers, mothers, uncles, aunts, nieces and cousins have worked for Rossing 
 and that inspired us to go work there. \nIt is really hurtful to loose your 
 job like that and not knowing what the future holds for you, we are still 
 young and still have many more years to work, the oldest of our comrade is 
 49 years and the youngest 32 years. We currently facing serious financial 
 and emotional  hardships as a result of this dismissals. \n\nWe call on 
 every worker and every comrade to stand with us in solidarity and condemn 
 any employer that is in violation of workers rights. We also appeal to 
 comrades, brothers and sisters to assist us with any financial support 
 during this time as we fight Rossing Uranium Ltd through the justice system 
 for their unlawful acts.\n\nThe Union will always advocate for fairness, 
 equal treatment and justice for all. \n\nIn solidarity the Dismissed BEC 
 Rossing Branch.\n\nnternational Labor Solidarity Committee For The Namibian 
 Miners\nhttps://ilscnamibia.wordpress.com\nhttps://www.facebook.com/ILSCNamibianMiners\nilscnamibia(at)gmail.com\n\nFor 
 further information & for solidarity statements contact\nGeorge Martin, 
 NMWU Rossing Branch Secretary\nnehoya141082(at)gmail.com\n\nThe Working 
 Class Movement (Namibia) A Report\n\n9/24/21\n\n\nEndobo Hostel\n\nAbout 
 3,500 occupants of the Endobo Hostel are facing eviction by a former 
 official of the Goldfields management of the TCL (Tsumeb Corporation 
 Limited) mine of Tsumeb, which went into liquidation in 1998. This 
 management with some trade unionists of the Mineworkers Union of Namibia 
 (MUN) formed a company Ongopolo Mining and Processing Limited in 
 1999.\n\nIn 2000 the company obtained a court order of the High Court to 
 take over all the assets of the TCL for N$57 million:\n\n40 million from 
 the Government Institutions Pension Fund (GIPF) and,\n17 million from the 
 TCL miners’ pension fund, the operational capital of the mine was 
 subsequently funded by the TCL mineworker’s pension fund to an unknown 
 total amount until it too was taken over in 2005. \nDespite the court order 
 the members of the former TCL (Goldfields South Africa) management formed a 
 bogus company Ongopolo Mining Limited with which they seized the so-called 
 noncore properties and the government simply allowed the funds from the 
 GIPF (Government Institutions Pension Fund) and the workers’ pension 
 funds was wasted. \n\nSince 2002 one Christof Groenewald a former member of 
 Gold Fields management start charging rent on the dilapidated Endobo 
 Hostel, which was not habitable in terms of the health standard, policies 
 and laws. In 2008 Endobo Hostel was proclaimed as part of the township of 
 Tsumeb, but there was no compliance certificates issued and approved plan 
 or layout, in terms of the Local Authorities laws and regulations it was 
 not habitable because it did not comply with inspections.\n\nIn 2018 after 
 numerous eviction applications in the magistrate’s court he (Christof 
 Groenewald) lodged an eviction application in The High Court in Windhoek. 
 The landlord then used the Courts and the Namibian Police to try and evict 
 tenants namely; Bartholomeus Shipipa, Alfeus Shiputa, Tomas Samuel, 
 Cornelius Iyambo, Lena Boois, Moses Ndumba, John Kasona, Saara Tegelela, 
 Lazarus Shikongo, Magdalena Guim, Petrus Mbundu & Elton Gaoab. Two other 
 members were arrested Willem Matjaji & Eugine Matongo on charges of 
 trespassing by the Namibian Police Warrant Endjala with no court order; 
 amongst this was also other acts by the so called landlord, water and 
 electricity cuts to the hostel for weeks the people of Endobo hostel were 
 left without these two essential services. During all this events the 
 matter was before court and no court order or what so ever was given for 
 him to act so inhumanly towards the tenants. \n\nThe community of Endobo 
 found out later that the Hostel does not belong to Christof Groenewald and 
 that he used the Municipality of Tsumeb and the Namibian Police as power to 
 abuse the peace of the Endobo tenants. On the 11th to 15th May 2020 the 
 matter was set for trial in the High Court in Windhoek the lawyer 
 representing the community was new on the case and he was not granted 
 adequate time and facilities to study the case in order to prepare a strong 
 defense and above all it was a one sided trial as the judgment was in favor 
 of Christof Groenewald. \n\nWe therefore realized how corrupt the justice 
 system of Namibia is, how it cannot be trusted and we appealed to the 
 Supreme Court, but while the appeal is still pending. \n\nAs we speak the 
 police arrested occupants; the magistrates court still issue eviction 
 warrants without court orders. This case is a clear example of clear entire 
 corrupt State organ being used by the Goldfields mining management in 
 Tsumeb and its shows that Tsumeb is owned by these cruel an manipulative 
 elite that are harassing and victimizing thousands of workers, many of them 
 descendants of the contract laborers.  \n\nEvery Namibian has the right to 
 decent accommodation and or shelter with the basic essential utilities, a 
 right to a free and fair trial without any right being infringe, we live in 
 a democratic state which must uphold the rule of law and protect its 
 citizen by any means but instead our citizens are treated like second class 
 citizens and denied their fundamental rights and freedoms to the advantage 
 of some elites and foreigners by advancing corrupt practices.\n\nNAMIBIA 
 FISHERMEN UNITED ASSOCIATED \n\nIn 26 October 2015 more than 4000 fishermen 
 were illegally dismissed and referred the dispute to the office of the 
 labour commissioner for unfair dismissal and the application was rejected 
 without a valid reason, falsely claiming that the time prescribe for the 
 dispute to be filed.\n\nThe labour commissioner ignored the countless 
 communications being it telephonically or written letters from the 
 fisherman on the mistake made by his office to reject their application for 
 over a year and they also appointed a lawyer from Cape Town to represent 
 them and once more the labour commissioner failed to reply and with this a 
 review application was t filled in Labour Court in 2019.  The review was 
 unopposed and Judge Hosea Angula took the matter to the High Court which 
 had no jurisdiction to hear the matter, we objected and requested him to 
 recuse himself due the nature of our case and the past history and 
 connection to the fishing industry.\n\nThe request was ignored and he dealt 
 with the matter in terms of the rules of the High Court dragging out the 
 matter for more than a year, the FISHERMEN DEMAND THE RIGHT TO APPROACH a 
 COURT OF LAW AND FOR A FAIR HEARING. They founded the Namibia Fishermen 
 United Association in 2019 after being betrayed by most of the unions 
 during and after their strike in October 2015 which led to their illegally 
 and unlawful dismissals.\n\n \nThe Unlawfully Dismissed Mineworkers Union 
 Branch Executives of China National Nuclear Corporation Rossing Uranium 
 Limited \n\nThe Mineworkers Union of Namibia (MUN) was formalized in 1986, 
 the Rossing MUN Branch signed the first ever recognition agreement in 
 Namibia on the 14th November 1988 that governs the relationship between MUN 
 and Rossing Uranium Ltd, which is still in existence.\n\nUnder Rio Tinto as 
 a majority shareholder at Rossing Uranium Ltd, as employees we  were part 
 of the greater Rio Tinto and labour relations were based on the existing 
 laws although we had our difference we still coexisted and Rio Tinto 
 respected and complied with legislation, the internal policies and 
 agreements. Rio Tinto understood the role of the union with regards to the 
 Supreme Law of Namibia and Labour Act 11 of 2007. \nThis all started to 
 change when Rio Tinto sold all shares in Rossing Uranium Ltd to CNNC (China 
 National Nuclear Corporation) in July 2019, the China National Nuclear 
 Corporation management used every opportunity to suppress and threaten 
 union rights by demanding to renegotiate our existing conditions to less 
 favorable conditions. \n\nThe following agreements were 
 targeted:\n\nProcedural Agreement of 14th November 1988\nPerformance and 
 Conduct Procedure (Disciplinary Code)\nRecruitment Policy \nRetrenchment 
 Package Agreement \nCondition of employment \nSalary Scales and structures 
 \nMedical aid provider\n\nTheir renegotiation attempts failed and this 
 culminated into grave attacks on union leadership and led to the unlawful 
 and illegal dismissal of the branch executive committee.  \n\nBetween July 
 and September 2020, the management unlawfully and illegally suspended, 
 charged and dismissed the Nine Executive Committee Members in their 
 individual employment positions on unfounded and witch hunt allegations 
 against MUN (Mineworkers Union of Namibia) for leaking confidential 
 information about the illegal employment of the 4 Chinese nationals in 
 management to the media, breaching employment contracts and bringing the 
 company’ name into disrepute.\n\nFor the mine to dismiss an organ of the 
 union is a complete renunciation of the laws of Namibia, what will be the 
 full social economic and political implication of this? It will mean 
 Namibia is not a sovereign state, there is no rule of law, and legal 
 entities in Namibia are without any legal protection. MUN Rossing Branch is 
 the foundation and torch bearer of the union movement in Namibia this 
 attacks on the union movement as express in the Rossing situation echoes 
 the capitalist attack on the union movement around the country and around 
 the world, as leaders of the workers movement (union) we will defend this 
 fundamental rights which Namibian workers have fought and won for more than 
 a century.\n\nWe filed two labour disputes with the office of the labour 
 commissioner in August 2020 and October 2020, the first case is of unfair 
 labour practices, where we had one session and it was postponed for a 
 future date; and the second case is the unfair dismissals that was 
 previously postponed on three occasions and the latest being the 19 April 
 2021 during conciliation  based on CNNC Rossing Uranium Ltd request and 
 after that we received a court order from CNNC Rossing Uranium Ltd for the 
 proceedings to stay.\n          \nThis are the following nine unlawfully 
 dismissed members with their different profiles of the Mineworkers Union of 
 Namibia CNNC Rossing Uranium Limited Branch that worked an average of 10 
 years on the mine,\n\nBranch Chairperson - Johannes Hamutenya (Warehouse 
 Controller) worked 13 years for Rossing Uranium Ltd       \nBranch Vice 
 Chairperson - Albertos Alexander Hennes Haraseb (Shovel Team Leader) worked 
 16 years for Rossing Uranium Ltd\nBranch Secretary - George Martin 
 (Condition Monitoring Technician) worked 13 years for Rossing Uranium 
 Ltd\nBranch Vice Secretary - Samuel Shindume (Fitter & Turner) worked 5 
 years for Rossing Uranium Ltd\nBranch Treasurer - Fillemon Ihuhwa (Shovel 
 Team Leader)  worked 15 years for Rossing Uranium Ltd\nBranch Vice 
 Treasurer - Paulus Shikongo (Boilermaker) worked 13 years for Rossing 
 Uranium Ltd\nBranch Secretary for Information and Publicity - Julius 
 Ashipala (Auto Electrician) worked 9 years for Rossing Uranium Ltd\nBranch 
 Vice Secretary for Information and Publicity - Hafeni Nalusha (Shovel Team 
 Leader) worked 12 years Rossing Uranium Ltd \nBranch Full-time Shop steward 
 - Roben Snydewel (Blaster) worked 9 years Rossing Uranium Ltd\nThe role of 
 imperialism today has reflected in the CNNC Rossing Uranium Limited example 
 is to destroy fundamental rights and derogate the social economic and 
 political relations and in particular the property relations brought to 
 bear on the working classes worldwide. This actions have also spread to our 
 sister mines as we have our brothers and sister being which hunted by this 
 corporate giants simply for standing up for their rights and members, \nThe 
 bay Feng branch executives and their shop  stewards where also dismissed 
 unlawfully for demanding justice as their chairperson was unlawfully 
 suspended and given a final written warning and they handed a petition 
 which led to their dismissals\nThe BestCheer members are currently facing 
 retrenchments as a result of a recently ended almost 4 months strike, as 
 they demanded for better wages, benefits and healthcare. This is a strategy 
 used by the management to get rid of the union and them representatives to 
 remote control workers.\nElgin Brown unfairly dismissed a very vocal and 
 ethical Affirmative Action representatives (Leonard Ipumbu) that stood for 
 workers’ rights, equal and fair treatment for all workers. He won his 
 case at arbitration with his prayer being reinstated with all losses but 
 the corrupt arbitrator deliberately erred and she did not award 
 reinstatement and loss but instead only ordered loss of basic salary. He is 
 currently challenging the arbitrator’s award in the labour court with a 
 review application.\nJumbo Char Coal also unfairly dismissed a Union 
 representative (Veronica Paulse) that represented workers at disciplinary 
 hearings, grievances and health and safety matters. Her case was filed with 
 the office of the labour commissioner and she is still waiting for her 
 arbitration date. \n\nWe firmly believe that the only outstanding matter to 
 resolve this increasingly destructive situation is the crisis of leadership 
 in the working class movement, we dedicate ourselves to work to resolve the 
 crisis by building such a leadership nationally and internationally.\n\nWe 
 are calling on international solidarity as we stand together with the 
 Fisherman United Association, the unlawfully dismissed Mineworkers Union 
 Branch Executive of China National Nuclear Corporation Rossing Uranium 
 Ltd., TCL Miners, BestCheer Employees, Bay Feng Unlawfully dismissed Branch 
 Executives and employees, unfairly dismissed shop stewards and Affirmative 
 Action representatives.\n\nForward and onward,\n\nIn Solidarity.\nMUN 
 Rossing Branch Leadership\n\nA Brief Struggle of the Union Movement in 
 Namibia (South West Africa).\n\nSwakopmund, Namibia, Africa.\n\nTo: Workers 
 and Union Movements World Wide\n\nA Brief Struggle of the Union Movement in 
 Namibia (South West Africa).\n\nThe Namibian Working class has since the 
 late 1800 been confronted with exploitation and general labour unrest. In 
 the 1900 we had various strikes, notably the 1971 – 1972 general great 
 strike. It was against all forms of abuses in all sectors of the industry. 
 The strike brought the whole country to stand still. This showed the shared 
 power of the working class, it set of the seismic power of the working 
 class, demonstrating to the whole Africa how powerful the working class can 
 be. It was the most historic demonstration of the power of the working 
 class, it inspired the whole southern Africa to rise up and indeed the 
 whole working class of southern Africa rose up in 1973.\n\nThe union 
 movement got into focus, so much so that the struggle spilled back from 
 South Africa into Namibia, that in 1978 the labour movement (union) was 
 born in Rossing Uranium Mine. They tried to brutally suppress but they did 
 not succeed, jailing the leaders under Administrative General (AG) 
 proclamation 26. The repression continued but failed to supress the rising 
 working movement, in 1984 the workers won the rights to organize the union 
 movement and register trade unions. The culmination of those rights were 
 contained in the 1992 Labour Act (Legislation), the pinnacle of labour 
 rights in Namibia.\n\nThe problem is while as the Namibian working class 
 succeeded in winning these significant union and labour rights as was 
 enshrined in 1992 Labour Act and the 1990 Democratic Constitution of 
 Namibia, the multinational corporation came down with vengeance to try 
 nullifying the unions and labour rights in its entirety. The last bastion 
 of Labour Rights Rossing Uranium Mine is now under massive attack by the 
 Chinese National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) Rossing Uranium Limited, if 
 Rossing Labour Rights falls then, it is the end of unions and labour 
 working class rights in Namibia.\n\nThe ultimate vision is to defend and 
 restore union rights with all the legal and all the other possible and 
 impossible means at our disposal, as the anti-union actions will not only 
 be the destruction of union rights but also the destruction of the rule of 
 law and all the fundamental rights that Namibians fought for.\n\nWe have 
 inalienable rights of freedom of association and the democratic rights of 
 juristic persons, for foreign corporations and multinational corporations 
 to override the rights of juristic persons in Namibia, individuals or 
 corporate is the end of fundamental rights in this country (Namibia).\n\nIn 
 this particular case, since Chinese National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) 
 became majority shareholder of Rossing Uranium, when they bought out Rio 
 Tinto round about July 2019, the Chinese management used every opportunity 
 to suppress and threaten union rights, they are anti-union which translate 
 in anti-workers’ rights. They came to outs and uproot the dully elected 
 organ of the union which was established in terms of the Supreme Law of 
 Namibia (Constitution), Labour Legislation (Labour Act), and MUN 
 Constitution. By doing so they destroyed the corporation existence of the 
 union as a juristic person. It must be understood that the agreement 
 between Mine Workers Union of Namibia( Union) and Rossing Uranium Mine is 
 between two independent juristic persons, who has the legal capacity 
 competence to conclude an agreement between two equal legal entities. 
 Contractual relation between entities in a democracy like Namibia is only 
 enforceable between two equal entities in this case between the union and 
 the mine.\n\nFor the mine to dismiss an organ of the union is a complete 
 renunciation of the law of contract, what will be the full social economic 
 and political implication of this? It will mean Namibia is not a sovereign 
 state, there is no rule of law, and legal entities in Namibia are without 
 any legal protection.\n\nWe as leaders of the workers movement (union) will 
 defend this fundamental rights which Namibian workers have fought for more 
 than a century, we therefore appeal to the union movements worldwide to 
 assist us to resist the destruction of the union rights in this country and 
 to stop the defeat that has been inflicted on the working class of Namibia, 
 not only at China Nation Nuclear Corporation Rossing Uranium Limited Ltd, 
 but Nationwide.\n\nThe Struggle Continues\n\nThe Nine Dismissed Union 
 Leaders \n\nSolidarity support statement sent to\n\nGeorge Martin, NMWU 
 Rossing Branch Secretary\nnehoya141082(at)gmail.com\n\nNamibian Rössing 
 mine workers left exposed -  National Miners Union Supports Rössing Union 
 Branch\n\nNational Miners Union Supports Rössing Union 
 Branch\n\nhttps://informante.web.na/?p=293745\nPosted by Daniel Terblanche  
 \n\nDate: Jul 15, 2020 in: Breaking News\n\nNiël Terblanché\n\nTACTICS by 
 the Chinese owners and managers of Namibia’s oldest uranium mine to 
 decapitate the Branch Executive Committee (BEC) of the Mine Workers Union 
 of Namibia (MUN) at Rössing from its regional and national structure has 
 failed.\n\nThe dispute started when the proxies of the Chinese Government, 
 China National Nuclear Corporation, unilaterally decided to do away with a 
 decades-old right of union representatives to be afforded their own office 
 space for administrative purposes is now growing into an inevitable 
 confrontation which could lead to criminal charges being brought against 
 individuals in the mine’s management structure.\n\nHowever, the COVID-19 
 pandemic and resultant restrictive measures have reduced a festering 
 dispute at the mine to a contest of letter writing skills.\n\nRössing 
 Chinese owners managers Namibia uranium mine Branch Executive Committee BEC 
 Mine Workers Union\nLOOMING SHOWDOWN: The President of the Mine Workers 
 Union of Namibia, Allan Kalumbu, is concerned about workers of Rössing 
 Uranium Limited being treated as second-class citizens by the Chinese mine 
 owners.\nA letter of demand by the legal representatives of the BEC to 
 restore the union’s entrenched rights led to the summary suspension of 
 committee members and shop stewards which left workers on the mine without 
 any representation and exposed to the whims of the Chinese managers.\n\nTo 
 counter the move by the mine’s management, workers elected interim shop 
 stewards to represent them if and when the need would arise.\n\nThe 
 managers in a letter, however, notified the workers that the people in 
 acting positions will not be recognised as legitimate union 
 representatives.\n\nThe workers then countered by informing the management 
 in a letter that they intend to withhold labour by staying on the buses 
 that transports them until such time that they are allowed to hand over a 
 petition in which they demand that the suspension of the BEC members must 
 be lifted.\n\nThe mine informed the workers in a letter that “staying on 
 the bus” would be tantamount to an illegal strike and in contradiction of 
 a certain section in the Procedural Agreement that they have signed with 
 their employers and that matter will be dealt with in terms of the 
 company’s performance and conduct procedure.\n\nThe MUN’s Regional 
 Chairperson, Abiud Kapere, said the situation at the mine has become 
 untenable because the BEC members were suspended and that they were 
 informed that it is subject to an investigation of some kind.\n\n“We 
 still have to be informed what the investigation is all about,” Kapere 
 said.\n\nHe said that in the meantime the MUN’s regional leadership has 
 engaged the mine’s management in a letter and requested that the handover 
 of the petition be put on hold until an amicable point can be reached 
 between the two parties.\n\n“They have since sent us a letter that a 
 moratorium was placed on further disciplinary action against the BEC 
 members,” Kapere said.\n\nThe President of the MUN, Allan Kalumbu, said 
 the current situation at the mine is of grave concern to the 
 Union.\n\n“The workers are left exposed and we are reduced to 
 corresponding with letters to rectify the situation. It would be better if 
 we all could sit around a table where the way forward can be hammered out 
 and discussed,” he said.\n\nKalumbu said that with the State of Emergency 
 in place the national body can hardly do anything and added that it would 
 be a very sad day in Namibia’s labour history if the COVID-19 pandemic is 
 used as a loophole by the management of China National Nuclear Corporation 
 to dismiss workers.\n\nNamibia Mine Workers Union Rossing Branch Letter to 
 Chinese President Xi-Jinping\n\nIn Africa there is a thread that connects 
 us together, we believe in an African adage" Muntu Muntu Movantu" a person 
 is a person because of persons. \n\nIt was never the rabbit or tortoise, 
 the lion or the ant, it is and was always all about the community, sharing 
 and caring for one another and that is why although we are the mother of 
 civilization, it was never used to colonise others, we always strive to be 
 one people on smaller and large scale, that to us is communism and 
 spectacular socialism, that ideology widens our arms to welcome citizens of 
 the world in their various forms  as brothers and sisters in macro 
 economics as investors.\n\nThe Light Away Difference \n\nUnder Rio Tinto, 
 as employees of Rossing Uranium Limited we were part of the greater Rio 
 Tinto and enjoyed sound labour relations characterized by humanity, respect 
 and mutual benefit for employer and employees, compliance with 
 legislations, etc., we co existed, enjoyed industrial stability, peace and 
 harmony. \n\nWe always strive and looked forward to a better tomorrow, a 
 notion and an ideology that seemed alien to Chinese government employees 
 assigned to Rossing Uranium Limited as Management under the Chinese 
 watch.\n\nHarassment and Job Security Mirth \n\nAlthough continuity of 
 employment was under threat as Rio Tinto sought to diversify, the 
 announcement that Chinese Owned Company was the new majority shareholders 
 terrified sending shock waves to employees. Negating employees to demand a 
 pay out from Rio Tinto before CNNC takes over, however Rio Tinto assured 
 employees that CNNC was carefully selected, it is  a Chinese company with a 
 high level of ethics and that we should be rest assured and they will be a 
 good employer, a dream we had awaken from. \n\nWe can only conclude that if 
 that was image, then it seems that during the selection the claws were 
 retracte because immediately upon arrival we started receiving requests to 
 renegotiate agreements that we have enjoyed over many years under Rio 
 Tinto. \n\nPerpetually demanded the changing of employment conditions to 
 less favorable and the Revocation of the existing procedural (recognition) 
 agreement, leave days, Sick leaves days, recruitment policy and the 
 performance and conduct procedure (disciplinary code) etc,. \n\nAs 
 Namibians the least we can get for exploitations of our natural resources 
 is discent employment, no slavery, no victimization, no exploitation, no 
 abuse, no intimidation, no unbearable conditions, etc. \n\nDuring the 
 diplomatic meetings, we were repeatedly reminded of the role the People 
 Republic of China played during the fight of the war our liberation, 
 independence,  against lawless, discrimination, economic slavery, 
 corruption, abuse of power, autocracy, dictatorship, colonization, etc., 
 \n\nIt seems the savior have become the killer, as it seems more of 
 changing of hands, from a hyena to a tiger. There is no difference between 
 that dark dispensation and these deplorable exploitative and draconian iron 
 fist dehumanizing treatment that we were subjected too as Union leaders and 
 for the management of Rossing Uranium Ltd to scoope to such low, cheap and 
 uncalled for tactics just to get rid of us putting the workers through the 
 very oppressing system that our forefathers fought through the struggles. 
 \n\nYour Chinese Nationals at Rossing Uranium Limited profess to be people 
 of peace, it is not so in its real sense but its rather Marshall law, do as 
 the master says and rulling by inflicting fear. That is exactly what 
 Chinese Management Assigned to Rossing Uranium Ltd did to us without a 
 single ethical, emotional or humantarian consideration. We are left to 
 question the real advancement of this Chinese management, can it be that we 
 are dealing with coded machines under instruction to destroy? \n\nIt 
 further seems, when we rejected bribe advances from Mr Feng, we became 
 meat. It is a shame that the next uprising in Namibia or greater Africa or 
 the world is an uprising against Chinese colonialism. \n\nThe Chinese 
 ambassador to Namibia committed that Rossing will operate for many years, 
 we never knew it will come at the price of slavery. \n\nYour citizens 
 deployed as management orchestrated our dismissal at all cost, they started 
 by threatening us, writing letters of instruction to the union head office 
 to discipline us, threatening to remove our agreements and privileges and 
 finally touching us and our family by fabricating charges on witch hunt 
 tactics and doing everything in their power against all odds to dismiss us. 
 \n\nWe the nine dismissed employees have an average of 102 people that 
 directly depended on us month to month, we bought cars, houses, clothing 
 and furniture on credit, some of our kids were attending private schools, 
 being driven every day to school by ourselves or by taxis, today we are not 
 able to provide for our families just because of exercising union rights as 
 represented of employees as per the Labour Act 11 of 2007 and Procedural 
 (Recognition) agreement 14 November 1988 and the Namibian Constitution. 
 \n\nUnder Rio Tinto, Rossing was always an employer of choice, however 
 under the  Chinese majority ownership, it has become an employer of no 
 choice and un \nemployment \n\nMr Xi Ping, communism that you and the good 
 people of China stand for is about community, the people and their welfare. 
 The action of your citizens not only threatens the stability, sovereignty 
 and constitutionalism but also the already destatible name not only of your 
 people but nation. \n\nThe hate and destate will continue to rise if you as 
 the chief in command does not take a stand of humanity against the 
 humanitarian crimes that your people have committed against us. \n\nUnless 
 it is your instruction to subdue, conquer, eliminate others and enslave 
 others. If it is not,  then we seek your solidarity stance, your 
 intervention to restore our employment and equally pronounce a word to your 
 people at Rossing Uranium Limited and the greater Namibia to refrain from 
 mistreating Namibian employees. \n\nAlthough we believe that you will act, 
 time is against us as we do not know how long it will take for this letter 
 to get to you, if ever and when will you act. Our families and us are in 
 dare need of survival, we are sowing in the wind hoping seeding for a 
 ground harvest. \n\nOur names have been made dirty and tarnished, getting 
 employment in Namibia is almost impossible, it is the same as  expecting a 
 Chicken to grow teeth, therefore re-employment looks like the only option 
 that can happen if you intervene. \n\nMean while as we eagerly await your 
 imminent intervention, We appeal to the international communities, Unions 
 in Africa, America, Australia, Russia, United Kingdom, South and Noth 
 America, in China and Asia and to all non governmental, etc, to help us to 
 fight this morden colonialism and slavery. \n\nYours Comradely, \n\nThe 9 
 dismissed Rossing Branch Executive Committee members\n\nPress Statement By 
 The Rössing Executive Branch Of The Mineworkers Unioon Of Nambia (NUM) To 
 All The Workers of Namibia & Our International 
 Comrades\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/MUN-mineworkers-union-of-Namibia-1657250891189662/\nThe 
 online platform, Further Africa, on 19 July 2019 reported that, “Chinese 
 state-owned entities have effectively \ntaken control of uranium mining in 
 Namibia, following the takeover of Rössing uranium mine by China National 
 Uranium \nCorporation Limited (CNUC).\nRio Tinto announced on Tuesday, 16 
 July 2019, that it has completed the sale of its 69 percent stake in 
 Rössing Uranium \nLimited, which owns the Rössing mine near Arandis in 
 Erongo region.\nThe Rössing uranium mine situated in the Namib Desert is 
 the world’s longest-running open pit uranium mine.\nThe mine has been 
 producing and exporting uranium oxide from Namibia to nuclear power 
 utilities around the world \nsince its inception in 1976.\nChinese 
 state-owned entities have effectively taken control of uranium mining in 
 Namibia, following the takeover of \nRössing uranium mine by China 
 National Uranium Corporation Limited (CNUC).\nRio Tinto announced on 
 Tuesday, 16 July 2019, that it has completed the sale of its 69 percent 
 stake in Rössing Uranium \nLimited, which owns the Rössing mine near 
 Arandis in Erongo region.\nThe Rössing uranium mine situated in the Namib 
 Desert is the world’s longest-running open pit uranium mine.”\nOn 26 
 July 2019 the CNUC (China Nuclear Uranium Corporation) formally took over 
 as a majority shareholder of the Rössing \nUranium Mine. With it, the 
 Chinese mining management inherited the Collective Agreement of 1988 
 between the Mine Workers \nUnion of Namibia (MUN) and Rössing Uranium. The 
 MUN like the CNUCwere juristic persons, equal before the law. They were 
 both \ntied to the terms of the collective agreement, which were legally 
 enforceable.\nIn terms of the MUN’s legal status it had a duly elected 
 union branch executive at the Rössing mine. The branch is legally 
 \nuntouchable by the mine management.\nThis Rössing branch executive 
 committed itself and worked to rebuild the union to its original vision and 
 to restore the solidarity \namongst workers both nationally and 
 internationally.\nOn 2 July 2020, the management suspended the executive 
 from their individual employment positions on allegations against the 
 \nbranch executive for leaking information to the media.\nWe the former 
 branch executives were elected into office in October 2017 with the  
 mandate from our members to restore \nRossing Uranium Branch to its former 
 glory days re-establishing union and workers’ rights in full. We were 
 faced with a number \nof challenges at Rossing Uranium and the Rossing 
 Management made it their ultimate goal to remove the recognition as the 
 \nsole bargaining agent and to nullify our Procedural (Recognition) 
 Agreement by deliberately violating it. We made it our aim to \nchallenge 
 any violations from management and in doing so the management started 
 plotting a personal vendetta against the\n leadership of the 
 branch.\nSubsequent to the suspension, they held disciplinary hearings 
 ignoring our objection that the management had no right to \nfabricate 
 charges on problems it had with the executive. They dismissed all nine of 
 us with an average of 10 years working \nat Rossing Uranium mine and 
 directly affecting our dependents and our extended families just because of 
 a selfish agenda \nwith the aim of enslaving the Rossing workers and 
 bringing back the abolished contract system that was fought by our 
 \nforefathers during the colonial and or apartheid system. \nSince the 
 majority shareholder changed, the existence of the Mine Workers Union was 
 under threat because management has \nopted to intimidate, victimise and 
 scare any member of the MUN and remove most of the rights enjoyed through 
 the freedom \nof independence.  \nWe state that the Rössing Mine 
 management’s unlawful  actions signal the end of union and workers’ 
 rights in Namibia.\nIronically enough, it is here at Rössing that the 
 union movement in Namibia started and through bloody struggles finally won 
 \nunion rights since 1978. The glory of that achievement was expressed in 
 the fact that the united working class of Namibia \nformulated their rights 
 in a constitution drafted by the Rössing workers and which established the 
 basis of the workers’ \nrights and programme since 
 then.\nNineteen-seventy-eight was the culmination of struggles of workers 
 throughout the South African colonial period which \nsaw its pinnacle in 
 the 1971/72 Great General Strike in which contract labour in all economic 
 sectors brought the country \nto a standstill. The historical significance 
 of this struggle is that they pointed the workers to the end-goal. It 
 showed \neveryone the indispensibility and the power of our class.\nThis 
 inspired the South African working class to rise up since 1973 until South 
 Africa overthrew Apartheid in 1994.\nThis was our inheritance. The actions 
 of the Rössing management are designed to destroy these accomplishments, 
 \nrights and the law expressing them. \nIt wishes to displace independent 
 unionism with puppets in the service of management. This is with what they 
 are \nbusy now.\nOur executive warns the entire Namibian working class that 
 their very rights and ability to fight against their \nerosion are at 
 stake.\nWe call on all the workers of Namibia, our brothers in NUM and 
 NUMSA in South Africa, our brothers in the union \nmovement in Africa, 
 Europe and elsewhere to join us in whichever way possible to fight to 
 preserve the little which \nremains of our union movement and in the fight 
 to restore it to the level at which we once again can call it a 
 movement.\nWe have taken this matter to the Labour Commissioner, which 
 appointed a corrupt arbitrator who openly colludes with \nthe management. 
 The Government holds 3% shares in Rössing, but has to enforce the law. 
 \nThe Labour Commissioner breaks the law.\nThe case is a mockery in that 
 the management dismissed the executive members due to a dispute it created 
 against the \nbranch executive, but the Labour Commissioner’s office 
 refuses to hear the matter as one, but as individual unfair 
 dismissals.\nThe above shall give us all an idea of what and where the 
 struggle of the Namibian working class is now.\nOur executive branch 
 undertakes to fight this matter to the end.\nKINDLY EXPRESS IN WRITING YOUR 
 SUPPORT FOR OUR STRUGGLE!\n\nNamibia: CNNC Rössing Uranium mine must 
 reinstate nine dismissed union 
 members\n\nhttp://www.industriall-union.org/namibian-union-wants-cnnc-rossing-uranium-mine-to-reinstate-nine-dismissed-union-members\n\n\n21 
 January, 2021The Mineworkers Union of Namibia (MUN) is challenging the 
 unfair dismissals of nine union leaders at Rössing Uranium mine and 
 calling for their reinstatement. The union says besides the charges being 
 spurious, due process was not followed and the disciplinary hearings that 
 took place were a shamble.\n\nThe nine members of the former branch 
 executive committee at the mine are accused of gross negligence, bringing 
 the mine owner, China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) Rössing Uranium, 
 into disrepute, and for breaching confidentiality.\n\nThe charges came 
 after the nine refused to accept CNNC’s proposals to amend the existing 
 collective bargaining agreement. The union says the dismissed leaders also 
 asked “uncomfortable questions” on the irregular appointment of some 
 senior managers at the mine. The managers, who were recruited from China, 
 had work permits for another company and not for Rössing.\n\nMUN says when 
 CNNC bought Rössing Uranium mine from Rio Tinto in July 2019, guarantees 
 were made that working conditions would remain the same and that existing 
 collective bargaining agreements would be respected.\n\nHowever, a few 
 months later, CNNC wanted changes in the agreement, including on leave, 
 medical aid, wages, and retrenchment provisions. After facing resistance 
 from the union and being notified of impending strike action, the company 
 instead targeted the union leadership.\n\n“These sound industrial 
 relations, built over many years with Rio Tinto, are not only guaranteed as 
 part of the asset sale to the current owners but are guaranteed in the 
 constitution of Namibia. Unfortunately, the violations reflect a disturbing 
 pattern of abuse by Chinese Investment in Africa which will not be 
 allowed,”\nsays Glen Mpufane, IndustriALL mining director.\n\nThe matter 
 is now before the labour commissioner for arbitration and 
 conciliation.\n\nValter Sanches, IndustriALL general secretary, 
 says:\n\n“CNCC is intent on busting the union through intimidation and 
 attempting to instil fear in workers to stop them from joining the union. 
 This anti-union approach to labour relations is against the existing 
 collective bargaining agreements and threatens the cordial relations that 
 exist with the workers.\n“We urge the employer to respect the existing 
 collective agreements and to not temper with the rights of workers to 
 demand better working conditions.”\nRössing Uranium is an open pit mine 
 whose lifespan is expected to last until 2032.\n\nPhoto Credit: Conleth 
 Brady / IAEA\n\n\nNamibian Rössing Mine Workers Face Covid-19 & Attacks 
 From State Owned China National Uranium Corporation Limited 
 (CNUC)\nhttps://youtu.be/pHsDDqy_WPU\nThe Mineworkers Union of Namibia 
 (MUN) Rossing Branch & The Struggle of The Namibian Working 
 Class\nhttps://youtu.be/1LCD5ZuAgvc\nNamibia Rössing, union in wage 
 deadlock 
 https://www.namibian.com.na/198882/archive-read/Rössing-union-in-wage-deadlock\nChina 
 and Namibia Rössing Workers on Collision 
 Course\nhttps://www.facebook.com/informantenam/posts/3090166147716991/\nNamibia 
 MUN claims China National Nuclear Corporation is falling short of its 
 Rossing 
 promises\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nLuFIxwcIM&feature=emb_logo\nhttps://www.nbc.na/news/mun-claims-china-national-nuclear-corporation-falling-short-its-rossing-promises.29304\nNamibia 
 Rössing uranium mine union members face dismissal by Chinese 
 owners\nhttps://www.namibian.com.na/203896/archive-read/Rössing-union-members-face-dismissal\nSwapo, 
 what is 'Socialism with a Namibian 
 Character’?\nhttps://www.namibian.com.na/183845/archive-read/Letter-of-the-Week--Swapo-what-is-Socialism-with-a-Namibian-Character 
 \nNamibia says China can buy Rio's uranium stake if it respects 
 laws\nhttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-rio-tinto-namibia-china/namibia-says-china-can-buy-rios-uranium-stake-if-it-respects-laws-idUSKCN1SZ0UR\n\n\nMAY 
 29, 20191:18 AMUPDATED 2 YEARS AGO\n\nBy Nyasha Nyaungwa\n\n\nWINDHOEK 
 (Reuters) - Namibia’s mines and energy minister said he has no objection 
 to Rio Tinto’s sale of its uranium mine stake to China provided it 
 respects the African nation’s laws.\n\nA logo showing an entrance to the 
 Rio Tinto owned Rossing Uranium Mine in the Namib Desert near Arandis, 
 Namibia, February 23, 2017. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko\nRio, which is seeking 
 to divest less profitable assets, said last November that it was selling 
 its 69% stake in the world’s longest-running open pit uranium mine to 
 China for up to $106.5 million and expected the deal to be completed in the 
 first half of 2019.\n\nAsked whether the sale would be cleared, Mines and 
 Energy Minister Tom Alweendo told Reuters: “We have no objection to the 
 sale provided that the buyer abides by what’s expected of him by our 
 laws.”\n\nChina already owns stakes in Namibian uranium production, 
 which, along with diamonds, is the mainstay of the Namibian 
 economy.\n\nAddressing concerns among Namibians that China will bring in 
 foreign nationals to replace local employees, China National Uranium 
 Corporation (CNUC) Vice President Li Youliang told a public hearing last 
 week that was not the case.\n\nThere was “no intention to replace local 
 Namibian employees with foreign nationals solely as a result of this 
 transaction,” he told the hearing in the coastal town of Swakopmund.“In 
 fact, CNUC has a strong commitment to maintain the current level of local 
 employees.”\n\nRio Tinto is selling its stake in Rossing Uranium mine to 
 CNUC in a deal dependent on approval from the Namibian competition 
 commission.\n\nThe Namibian government holds a 3% stake in Rossing and 51% 
 of voting rights. The Iranian Foreign Investment Company also holds a 
 legacy 15% stake that goes back to the original funding of the mine, which 
 could have deterred some potential buyers.\n\nThe other shareholders are 
 the Development Corporation of South Africa (10%) and individual 
 shareholders (3%).\n\nChina is targeting nuclear power as an alternative to 
 fossil fuels. It was the only obvious buyer of the shares in the Ros sing 
 mine.\n\nRossing has been operating since 1976 and has produced more 
 uranium than any other mine. It employs around 1,000 workers and can carry 
 on producing until 2025.\n\nThe sale agreement comprises an initial cash 
 payment of $6.5 million, payable at completion, and a contingent payment of 
 up to $100 million following completion.\n\nThe contingent payment is 
 linked to uranium spot prices and Roofing’s net income during the next 
 seven years.\n\nWhile China is a big source of uranium demand, the market 
 has languished as Western countries turn away from the energy source and 
 trade tensions between the United States and China are generally disrupting 
 commodities trade.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/10/21/18845869.php
SUMMARY:Solidarity Rally For Fired Namibian Rossing Miners
LOCATION:San Francisco Chinese Consulate\n1450 Laguna St/Geary St.\nSan 
 Francisco\n\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/10/21/18845869.php
DTSTART:20211027T230000Z
DTEND:20211028T003000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
