SAFTU Independent, Militant and a Democratic Federation South African Federation of Trade Unions
(1)

Catch SAFTU generally secretary Zwelinzima Vavi discussing fuel price hikes on Newsroom Africa @ 20:15
31/03/2026

Catch SAFTU generally secretary Zwelinzima Vavi discussing fuel price hikes on Newsroom Africa @ 20:15

SAFTU on the impact of fuel hikes - 31 March 26
31/03/2026

SAFTU on the impact of fuel hikes - 31 March 26

30/03/2026

MEDIA STATEMENT
30 MARCH 2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SAFTU ENDORSES LABOUR'S CALLS AND DEMANDS URGENT ACTION

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU)fully supports calls by other labour formations for immediate government intervention and puts forward the following non-negotiable demands:

1. Immediate Scrapping of the Fuel Levy
Fuel prices are a key driver of inflation. Government must:
• Scrap the General Fuel Levy and RAF Levy immediately
• Introduce price controls and public regulation of fuel pricing.

2. Introduction of a Universal Basic Income Grant of at least R1500
• Immediate implementation of a R1500 universal grant
• Replace the inadequate SRD grant
• Ensure automatic inclusion of all unemployed adults.

3. Mass Food Security Intervention
In line with SAFTU’s submission to the SAHRC:
• Legislation to ban the destruction and wastage of food by retailers and agribusiness
• Mandatory redistribution of unsold edible food
• Expansion of school nutrition programmes to cover all learners.


4. Price Controls on Basic Goods
• Introduce price caps on essential food items and transport costs
• Strengthen the Competition Commission to act against profiteering.


5. Solidarity Tax on the Super-Rich
• Introduce a wealth tax and windfall taxes on corporations benefiting from crisis conditions
• Redirect these resources toward social protection and public services


6. Expansion of Public Services
• Reverse austerity and fill all critical vacancies in health, education, policing, and social services
• Increase funding for municipalities to ensure delivery of water, electricity, and sanitation

7. Public Ownership and Strategic Control
• Strengthen public control over energy, transport, and food systems
• End reliance on private monopolies that profiteer during crises


8. Protection of Jobs and Industry
• Introduce emergency measures to protect local industry from import surges and dumping
• Halt factory closures and support reindustrialisation



LESSONS FROM THE GLOBAL RESPONSE

The World Bank report clearly shows that governments across the world are:
• Subsidising fuel and energy costs
• Expanding cash transfers
• Introducing tax cuts and price controls
Yet in South Africa, the government continues to:
• Defend austerity
• Protect corporate profits
• Refuse meaningful redistribution
This is a political choice, not an economic necessity.


SAFTU calls on all affiliates, workers, community organisations, and progressive forces to:
• Unite in mass mobilisation against austerity and the cost-of-living crisis
• Build a broad front for food security, jobs, and social protection
• Prepare for national action under the banner:

“People Before Profits: No to Hunger, No to Austerity!”

This war is exposing the brutality of a global system that protects profits while condemning billions to poverty.
South Africa cannot respond with half-measures.

We need decisive, redistributive, pro-worker policies now.
The working class must not be made to pay for a crisis it did not create.


A statement was issued on behalf of SAFTU by the General Secretary, Zwelinzima. Vavi.
For media inquiries, contact the National Spokesperson at
Newton Masuku
newtonm@saftu.org.za
0661682157

Media Officer
Asive Dyani
0719019564

30/03/2026

WHAT IS THE LEFT AND WHAT IS NOT THE LEFT?

A working-class political education pamphlet

THE LEFT IS NOT CONFUSION - IT IS A SIDE

The left is not a label. It is not a slogan. It is not what people call themselves.

The left is a position in the class struggle.

It stands openly and unapologetically with the working class and the poor not in words, but in action.

THE LEFT: ORGANISES, FIGHTS, BUILDS UNITY

The left is found in struggle:
•Marching against unemployment, job losses and factory closures
•Fighting deindustrialisation and the destruction of productive capacity
•Demanding jobs, living wages and decent work
•Organising against poverty, hunger and food insecurity
•Challenging inequality and wealth concentration
•Defending and expanding public healthcare, education and basic services
•Fighting corruption but understanding it as part of a system that serves elites
•Building unity of the working class across race, nationality and gender

The left understands:

The crisis is not caused by the poor, it is caused by a system that puts profit before people.

THE RIGHT: DIVIDES, BLAMES, DEFENDS POWER

The right does not fight the system - it protects it.

It will never mobilise against capital, because it serves capital.

Instead, it:
•Scapegoats migrants for unemployment and crime
•Fuels xenophobia, tribalism and division among the poor
•Promotes slogans like “AMERICA/South Africa First” to hide class inequality
•Calls for repression, policing and punishment instead of justice
•Supports austerity, privatisation and cuts to public services - neocolonial and neoliberal economic development.
•Accepts and defends mass unemployment as “normal”

When the system fails, the right blames the victims not the system.

THE RIGHT WILL NEVER FIGHT WHERE IT MATTERS

Ask a simple question:

When last did they march against:
•Big corporations retrenching workers?
•Factory closures and import dumping?
•Banks, monopolies and capital flight including illicit trade?
•The collapse of public healthcare and education?

They never do.

Because their politics is not about change it is about protecting power.

REACTIONARY POLITICS IN DISGUISE

The modern right presents itself as “anti-establishment” but it is deeply aligned with reactionary global forces:
•Admirers of Donald Trump, Jair Bolsonaro and similar figures
•Promoters of authoritarian, nationalist and anti-worker politics
•Allies of racist, xenophobic and extremist movements.

They speak the language of “the people” but serve the interests of the powerful.

SOCIAL CONTROL, NOT LIBERATION

The right seeks to control society, not liberate it:
•Calls for the death penalty instead of addressing root causes of crime and violence
•Attacks on women’s rights, including opposition to termination of pregnancy even in cases of r**e or danger
•Open hostility to gay and le***an people, and broader LGBTQ+ communities
•Promotion of patriarchy, exclusion and intolerance

RELIGION USED AS A WEAPON

The right increasingly uses religion not as faith but as politics:
•Justifying oppression in the name of “morality”. They will never march against the destruction of societies and genocide against Palestine - they are friends of imperialist and probably get money yo march from the state of Israel.
•Attacking women and LGBTQ+ people using religious arguments
•Defending injustice and inequality as “natural”

Most dangerously:
•Defending the actions of the Israeli state including the mass killing of civilians using the Bible as justification

This is not faith.

It is the use of religion to defend power, violence and injustice.

WHAT ABOUT FASCISM?

At its extreme, this politics becomes fascism:
•Rule by strongmen
•Crushing of opposition
•Violent nationalism
•Blaming minorities
•Alliance between the state and big capital

Fascism grows when crisis deepens
and when people are divided instead of united.

29/03/2026

I have spoken before about the existence of two parallel worlds in our country. These worlds that exist side by side, yet are fundamentally disconnected.

On the one hand, there is a world defined by humiliating poverty, mass unemployment, and deepening, degrading inequality. It is a world in which the working class and even sections of the middle strata are sinking under unbearable levels of debt. A world where families are losing their homes and cars through bank repossessions, where dignity is stripped away, and where the psychological toll is so severe that it is contributing to a growing crisis of mental illness and even su***de epidemic.

But alongside this reality, there exists another world.

A world of excess, opulence, privilege, and insulation from suffering.

In this world, elites parade in foreign designer labels such as brands like Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Versace, Dior, Balenciaga, Prada, Hermès and Chanel. These outfits cost more than what many workers earn in months or even years. In this world the elites move around in chauffeur-driven luxury vehicles worth millions: Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Maybach, Range Rover Autobiography and top of a range Vianno: These are symbols not just of wealth, but of social distance from the lived reality of the majority. The Madlanga Commission has helped to educate the country about these two worlds.

The top elites of politically connected gather at exclusive events where a single bottle of wine can cost more than a worker’s monthly wage — Château Margaux, Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, Screaming Eagle, Penfolds Grange or where rare whiskies like Macallan 1926, Dalmore 62, or Glenfiddich 1937 are poured, not for necessity, but for status. Prices inflated not just by rarity, but by venues designed to exclude the very people whose labour sustains this economy.

These are not just two different lifestyles. They are two different realities: one of survival, the other of opulence.

And in the shadows of this widening divide, a dangerous shift is taking place: sections of the working class, pushed to the brink, are increasingly turning against one another. Regionalism, tribalism and xenophobia are rising, as the poor are driven to fight the poor, while the real sources of the crisis remain untouched.

Meanwhile, the elites in Houghton, Sandton, Ballito, and enclaves such as Constantia, Bishopscourt, Clifton, Camps Bay and Bantry Bay in Cape Town remain largely insulated from the daily realities of violence, insecurity and social breakdown.

The latest findings associated with voter participation trends, as reflected in IEC-related data, point to a deeply worrying reality: barely a quarter of eligible voters still believe that this democracy, one that has produced such extremes is worth participating in.

This is not apathy. It is a crisis of legitimacy.

It is a silent protest by millions who feel abandoned, excluded, and betrayed.

Unless this widening chasm is confronted, unless the economy is fundamentally restructured to serve the many and not the few, we are not just facing an economic crisis, but a profound social and political rupture.

This is a powder keg waiting to implode.

28/03/2026
SAFTU sends revolutionary greetings to the JC Bez Region of NUMSA on its political Induction.  The Induction is held at ...
28/03/2026

SAFTU sends revolutionary greetings to the JC Bez Region of NUMSA on its political Induction.

The Induction is held at a time when workers are seriously under attack, facing retrenchments, plant closures, short-time, electricity hikes, and deepening geopolitical crisis. This step strengthens miltant and conscious worker leadership.

26/03/2026

President Thabo Mbeki spoke at the NEDLAC Labour Summit on 25 March 2026 regarding the origins and process of the National Dialogue.

STATEMENT BY THE SOUTH AFRICAN FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS (SAFTU) ON THE PASSING OF VETERAN JOURNALIST AND REVOLUTIONARY...
26/03/2026

STATEMENT BY THE SOUTH AFRICAN FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS (SAFTU) ON THE PASSING OF VETERAN JOURNALIST AND REVOLUTIONARY, TERRY BELL

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) mourns the passing of veteran journalist, anti-apartheid activist, and lifelong revolutionary, Comrade Terry Bell, who has died at the age of 84.

We extend our deepest condolences to his family, comrades, and the broader community of workers, activists, and progressive intellectuals across the world who have been shaped by his life, his pen, and his unwavering commitment to justice.

Terry Bell was not simply a journalist. He was a combatant in the struggle for truth, a revolutionary intellectual, and a tireless advocate for the working class. His life stands as a living archive of resistance, from the underground struggles against apartheid, to exile, to the unfinished battles against inequality, imperialism, and exploitation in post-apartheid South Africa and globally.

From his early days helping to build the non-racial South African Journalists’ Union, to editing the clandestine publication Combat, Bell placed his life on the line in the fight against apartheid repression. His detention under the notorious 90-day law in 1964 and subsequent exile did not silence him – it sharpened his resolve.

In Zambia, in the United Kingdom, and later in New Zealand, he continued to organise, write, and mobilise. In London, he contributed to Anti-Apartheid News and the Daily Worker, embedding himself in the global movement against apartheid and capitalism. In Tanzania, alongside his partner, Barbara, he helped build the Somafco school system and drafted the ANC’s first primary school curriculum. This act demonstrated his belief that education itself is a site of struggle.

Importantly, Terry Bell was a revolutionary who refused unquestioning loyalty. Whnaivenfronted with abuses within the liberation movement, he chose principle over comfort, resigning from positions rather than compromising his values. This moral courage defined his life.

Upon his return to South Africa in 1991, he refused the temptations of political office or proximity to power. Instead, he remained rooted among workers and the oppressed, advancing a clear and uncompromising position:

“Vote ANC, but build a socialist alternative.”

This position resonates deeply with SAFTU’s own understanding that the liberation of the working class cannot be outsourced to political elites, but must be built through independent organisation, struggle, and socialist transformation.

As a journalist, Terry Bell was fearless. His columns in Business Report, Fin24, City Press, and numerous other platforms were marked by clarity, courage, and class consciousness. He wrote not for comfort, but to provoke thought, expose injustice, and sharpen struggle.

Even in his final years, his pen remained sharp. He warned of the dangers of nationalism degenerating into authoritarianism and fascism. He stood firmly against imperialism and the genocide unfolding in Palestine, refusing to be silenced, even when banned from major platforms. He remained, to the very end, an internationalist who understood that the struggle of the South African working class is inseparable from the struggles of oppressed peoples everywhere.

In his New Year's message at the beginning of 2026, he called for:

“a future that could be free of the lies and deceits of national leaders, the bloodshed and horrors of armed conflict and the disastrous pursuit of profit before people… a true global democracy.”

This was not just a wish; it was a call to action.

Comrade Terry Bell also engaged deeply with SAFTU and its leadership. In his characteristic humility and comradeship, he addressed us as equals in struggle—Qabane. In one of his last reflections, he returned to a warning that remains profoundly relevant: that mass unemployment, inequality, and social despair are a powder keg, and that when it explodes, it is the working class that suffers the most both in the immediate chaos and in the generational scars that follow.

He was correct then, and he remains correct today.

South Africa continues to sit on that tinderbox of mass unemployment, deepening poverty, collapsing public services, and rising inequality. The eruptions we have witnessed are not accidents; they are the inevitable consequences of a system that places profit before people.

Terry Bell not only diagnosed these crises, but he demanded that we confront them honestly and forge a new path forward rooted in democracy, socialism, and working-class power.

SAFTU commits to honouring his legacy not through words alone, but through struggle:
- By intensifying the fight against austerity and neoliberalism
- By defending workers against exploitation, retrenchments, and precarious work
- By building unity between workers, the unemployed, and communities
- By strengthening international solidarity against imperialism and oppression
- By advancing the struggle for a socialist alternative

Terry Bell’s life teaches us that journalism must serve the people, that intellectual work must be anchored in struggle, and that neutrality in the face of injustice is complicity.

He was, truly, a colossal giant of our movement—a man who refused to be silenced, refused to be co-opted, and refused to abandon the working class.

We dip our revolutionary banner in his honour.

Hamba kahle, Qabane Terry Bell.
Your voice will echo in every struggle for justice.

Kuyafiwa
25/03/2026

Kuyafiwa

National police commissioner General Fannie Masemola will face criminal charges over Vusimusi “Cat” Matlala’s tainted R360-million health services tender.

22/03/2026

ZV on the highly publicised News24 jobs conference which aimed to create a false consensus of South African economic policies

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