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

01/02/2026

"America First"?

For millions of working class Americans, the reality is an epidemic of despair and cuts to essential support, while billionaires continue to grow unimaginably richer.

· Drug addiction led to $93 billion in lost productivity in the US last year and affects 48.5 million Americans. This issue isn't solely health-related; it also harms the economy and devastates working-class communities.

Jobs and the economy haven’t worked for working class communities.

While the administration often touts headline job figures, the reality for working-class people, especially those without college degrees, has been bleak. Recent analyses from credible policy groups show that in 2025 alone, employment for workers without college degrees fell by hundreds of thousands, and key sectors like manufacturing shed tens of thousands of jobs.

This is compounded by federal layoffs and cuts that disproportionately impact civil servants and frontline workers. Some put the figure of federal layoffs at 2 million jobs lost

· New legislation is reducing Medicaid and other health programmes, potentially leaving over 10 million people uninsured. These reductions mainly affect low-income families and threaten the survival of struggling rural hospitals.

· Even as support for the disadvantaged shrinks, billionaire wealth skyrockets. U.S. billionaires accumulated $1.5 trillion in one year. Elon Musk alone gained $305 billion—enough to fund significant healthcare cuts and still retain vast wealth.

Reports reveal that some of the richest Americans, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg, gained hundreds of billions of dollars amid a struggling economy.

This is not prioritising Americans. It's neglecting those in crisis while giving billionaires a blank cheque!

America First should be Billionaires First!

Some conservative South Africans fervently supported the “America First” narrative because of a combination of ignorance and conservative political ideology.

30/01/2026

MEDIA STATEMENT
30 JANUARY 2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SAFTU WELCOMES EXPULSION OF ISRAEL’S ENVOY ARIEL SEIDMAN: APARTHEID AND GENOCIDE MUST HAVE CONSEQUENCES

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) warmly and unequivocally welcomes the decision by the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) to declare Israel’s Chargé d’Affaires, Ariel Seidman, persona non grata and to order him to leave South Africa within 72 hours.

This is a principled, courageous and long-overdue step.

No representative of an apartheid and genocidal state should enjoy diplomatic comfort in a country whose freedom was won through the defeat of apartheid.

Israel’s actions in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territories constitute:

• war crimes
• crimes against humanity
• collective punishment
• the killing of thousands of civilians, women and children
• and a system of racial segregation that mirrors the worst features of apartheid South Africa

For Israel’s envoy to remain here while that regime carries out such atrocities would be an insult to the memory of our own liberation struggle.

By expelling Ariel Seidman, South Africa has made it clear that:

Our sovereignty will not be undermined.
International law must be respected.
Apartheid has consequences.

As a federation representing millions of working-class families, SAFTU stands firmly with the Palestinian people. Workers in South Africa recognise apartheid when they see it , and we refuse to be neutral in the face of oppression.

We commend DIRCO for taking this decisive action.

But this must not be the last step.

SAFTU calls on government to:

• further downgrade diplomatic relations with Israel
• suspend military, security and trade cooperation
• support sanctions and international isolation
• intensify action at the International Court of Justice
• actively support the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign

Apartheid in South Africa fell because the world isolated it. The same must happen to Israeli apartheid.

An injury to one is an injury to all.
Free Palestine.

Issued on behalf of the SAFTU General Secretary Zwelinzima Vavi.

For media inquiries, contact the National Spokesperson
Newton Masuku
newtonm@saftu.org.za

0661682157

Media Officer
Asive Dyani

30/01/2026

MEDIA STATEMENT
29 JANUARY 2026

SAFTU ON THE SARB MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEE STATEMENT

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) notes the recent Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) statement delivered by the South African Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago with deep concern. While the statement projects an image of technical stability and cautious optimism, it simultaneously reveals a persistent monetary policy framework that remains detached from the lived realities of the working class, the unemployed, and the broader structural crises confronting the South African economy.

The MPC’s narrative foregrounds global uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, financial market volatility, and inflation expectations, yet it fails to sufficiently account for the fact that South Africa’s primary crisis is not inflation but mass unemployment, deindustrialisation, and collapsing productive capacity. The fixation on inflation convergence toward a rigid 3% target continues to subordinate employment creation and economic transformation to financial orthodoxy. This approach reflects an entrenched neoliberal bias that privileges price stability and the interests of the financiers, over developmental imperatives, despite overwhelming evidence that South Africa’s economic stagnation is rooted in weak investment, insufficient industrial policy, and inadequate fiscal expansion rather than overheating demand.

The SARB’s assertion that growth is “steadier” because the economy has expanded for several consecutive quarters is deeply misleading when placed in proper context. Growth approaching 2% over the medium term is not a recovery; it is stagnation. In a country with one of the highest unemployment rates in the world, such growth is insufficient to absorb new entrants into the labour market, let alone reverse years of job losses. Celebrating marginal household consumption growth without confronting the collapse of fixed investment and manufacturing output reflects a narrow macroeconomic lens that ignores structural realities. Consumption without production merely deepens import dependence and household indebtedness, rather than building sustainable economic foundations.

Equally troubling is the MPC’s continued reliance on interest rates as the primary instrument of economic management. Maintaining the repurchase rate at 6.75%, and thereby the prime lending rate at 10.25%, under the guise of “moderate restrictiveness”, imposes a disproportionate burden on indebted households and small businesses while offering little relief to productive sectors that require affordable credit. High interest rates suppress domestic investment, increase the cost of public debt servicing, and ultimately constrain the state’s ability to finance social and infrastructure programmes. In this context, monetary policy functions less as a stabilising tool and more as an instrument of economic contraction, reinforcing inequality rather than alleviating it.

For the working class, the consequences of this high-interest-rate regime are not theoretical, they are immediate, material, and devastating. Workers are already overburdened by the ever-rising cost of living, including escalating food prices, electricity tariffs, transport costs, municipal service charges, and housing expenses. At the same time, the cost of debt continues to climb as interest rates remain elevated. Millions of households rely on credit simply to survive from month to month, and each rate hold or increase translates directly into higher repayments on home loans, vehicle finance, personal loans, and credit cards. Instead of relieving inflationary pressure, the current monetary stance is effectively squeezing disposable income, deepening household debt traps, and pushing families closer to financial collapse. This regime punishes workers who have no control over administered prices or global commodity shocks, yet bear the full burden of policy decisions made in boardrooms and financial institutions.

The MPC’s emphasis on inflation expectations and the pursuit of a new 3% target further exposes the ideological underpinnings of current policy. South Africa’s inflation rate, averaging 3.2% for the year and peaking temporarily at 3.6%, does not constitute an economic emergency. Yet the Reserve Bank treats even modest deviations as justification for maintaining tight financial conditions. This rigid adherence to low inflation targets ignores international evidence that developing economies can sustain higher inflation levels when accompanied by rising employment, wage growth, and productive expansion. Instead, the SARB’s dogma entrenches a low-growth, low-investment equilibrium that benefits financial markets while suffocating the real economy and impoverishing indebted households.

The statement’s treatment of electricity prices, food inflation, and administered costs also reveals a fundamental limitation of monetary policy. Interest rate adjustments cannot resolve structural supply-side issues such as energy pricing, logistics inefficiencies, or agricultural disruptions caused by disease outbreaks. Yet the MPC continues to imply that monetary tightening can mitigate these pressures. In reality, these challenges require coordinated fiscal, industrial, and infrastructural interventions, not the blunt instrument of high interest rates that simply transfers the pain onto workers and the poor.

Furthermore, the celebration of declining inflation expectations and “benign financing conditions” for emerging markets overlooks the social cost of such outcomes. Lower borrowing costs for investors do not automatically translate into improved living standards for workers. Without deliberate policies aimed at job creation, wage growth, and public investment, financial stability becomes an abstract achievement disconnected from everyday hardship. The Reserve Bank’s repeated calls for fiscal prudence and public debt reduction echo the austerity logic that has already weakened public services, frozen critical frontline posts, and exacerbated inequality.

SAFTU therefore rejects the implicit premise that “monetary discipline” will deliver economic prosperity. The South African economy requires a developmental macroeconomic framework that places employment, industrialisation, and social investment at its centre. Monetary policy must be aligned with expansionary fiscal policy, strategic state-led investment, and active industrial planning rather than functioning as a gatekeeper for financial orthodoxy. The current stance risks locking the country into a prolonged cycle of low growth, high unemployment, rising household indebtedness, and deepening social distress.

The MPC statement reflects a technocratic confidence that is not matched by material improvements in the lives of the majority. Stabilising inflation at 3% cannot be an end in itself when millions remain unemployed, workers are crushed by the rising cost of living, debt repayments escalate with each interest-rate decision, and public infrastructure continues to deteriorate.

SAFTU reiterates that economic policy must serve the people, not merely financial indicators. A genuine recovery demands bold, coordinated action to rebuild productive capacity, expand decent work, reduce household debt burdens, and restore the state’s ability to invest in its citizens. Without such a shift, the pursuit of price stability will remain an empty victory in a nation still grappling with profound economic injustice.

Issued on behalf of the SAFTU General Secretary Zwelinzima Vavi.

For media inquiries, contact the National Spokesperson at:
Newton Masuku
newtonm@saftu.org.za
0661682157
Media Officer
Asive Dyani
0719019564

29/01/2026

MEDIA STATEMENT
29 JANUARY 2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SAFTU WELCOMES THE MOVE TO EXTEND FULL LABOUR RIGHTS TO SOUTH AFRICA’S CREATIVE WORKERS

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) welcomes the long-overdue decision by the Department of Employment and Labour to extend full labour law protections to workers in the creative and performing arts sector.

For decades, actors, musicians, dancers, models, film and television crews and other cultural workers have been treated as “independent contractors, a label deliberately used to deny them basic rights that every worker deserves. Behind the glamour of the industry lies a harsh reality of exploitation: irregular incomes, unpaid overtime, unsafe working conditions, no medical cover, no UIF, no paid leave, and no protection when injured or dismissed.

This historic step to classify creative workers as employees under South Africa’s labour laws is a victory for justice and dignity.

Once implemented, these workers will finally be covered by:
• the National Minimum Wage,
• the Basic Conditions of Employment Act, including regulated hours and paid leave,

• the Labour Relations Act, guaranteeing protection against unfair dismissal and the right to organise, and

• Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases, ensuring protection when injured on set or on stage.

These are not privileges. They are rights that should never have been denied.

Ending “disguised employment”

SAFTU has consistently warned that employers across many sectors abuse “freelance” and “contractor” arrangements to escape their responsibilities. The creative industry has been one of the worst offenders. This reform is an important blow against the growing casualisation and gig-ification of work.

An injury to one is an injury to all, whether in a factory, hospital, mine, classroom or film set.��But rights on paper are not enough�We caution that legislation alone will not end exploitation. Enforcement is critical. Producers, agencies and corporations must not be allowed to find new loopholes to undermine workers’ rights.��We therefore call for:�• strict enforcement and inspections by the Department of Employment and Labour,
�• mandatory written contracts and contributions to UIF and compensation funds,
�• collective bargaining frameworks for the sector, and�• unionisation of creative workers to defend these gains.��SAFTU encourages all creative workers to organise themselves into democratic unions and join the broader working-class movement. Real protection comes not only from laws, but from collective power.��Creative workers are workers, Culture is work, Art is labour. And labour deserves dignity, protection and fair pay.��We stand in full solidarity with performers and all precarious workers fighting exploitation in every sector of the economy.

Issued on behalf of the SAFTU General Secretary Zwelinzima Vavi.
For media inquiries, contact the National Spokesperson at:
Newton Masuku
newtonm@saftu.org.za
0661682157
Media Officer
Asive Dyani
0719019564

29/01/2026

MEDIA STATEMENT
28 JANUARY 2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SAFTU ON THE SIU RECOVERY OF R1.7 BILLION IN UNALLOCATED NSFAS FUNDS

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) welcomes the announcement that the Special Investigating Unit (SIU) has recovered R1.7 billion in unallocated funds from the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), which will now be redirected to support students at higher education institutions across the country. This recovery represents an important step towards reclaiming public resources that must be used to advance access to education for working-class and poor students, for whom higher education remains the only pathway out of poverty, unemployment, and social exclusion.

The recovered funds relate to monies that were left unallocated between 2016 and 2021 after students who had qualified for NSFAS funding either changed institutions or deregistered. As a result, these resources remained unused for several years while thousands of students were excluded from higher education or forced to study under severe financial hardship. This situation unfolded against a backdrop of widespread student poverty, accommodation shortages, food insecurity, and rising student debt. In this context, the redistribution of these funds is not only welcome but long overdue and urgent.

However, SAFTU is deeply concerned that institutions and administrative systems allowed such a significant amount of money to sit idle while students were denied critical support. The fact that R1.7 billion could remain unaccounted for over several years points to serious weaknesses in financial management, accountability, and
oversight within the NSFAS system and associated institutions. Students were excluded, protests erupted on campuses, and academic progress was disrupted, while funds meant to alleviate these very conditions were effectively locked away.

The recovery of these funds must therefore be accompanied by decisive action to strengthen financial controls, improve coordination between NSFAS and institutions, and ensure that all unspent funds are promptly returned to the national funding pool.

As the 2026 academic year begins, the scale of the funding crisis in higher education remains stark. Demand for NSFAS support continues to grow year after year. For the upcoming academic cycle, nearly 900,000 applications were received from new tertiary students. More than one million students are expected to receive NSFAS funding in 2026, including over 600,000 first-time entrants into higher education. At the same time, thousands of students are still awaiting application outcomes or are stuck with incomplete applications, leaving many in a state of prolonged financial insecurity while attempting to pursue their studies.

These realities underscore the importance of ensuring that every available rand is used efficiently, transparently, and in the interests of students.

In a society characterised by deep economic inequality, mass youth unemployment, and rising barriers to education, NSFAS is not a discretionary programme but a critical social investment. Education is a constitutional right, and public funding for students is an essential instrument for realising that right in practice. Every rand lost through corruption, maladministration, inefficiency, or weak oversight directly undermines access to education and entrenches inequality across generations.

In this regard, SAFTU demands that NSFAS ensure the recovered R1.7 billion is utilised rapidly, transparently, and in a manner that directly addresses students’ material needs. These include tuition fees, accommodation, living allowances, food support, study materials, and other essential costs required for academic success.

Government and NSFAS must also urgently address persistent backlogs and administrative failures in application processing so that no eligible student is denied access to education due to bureaucratic delays or system inefficiencies.

Furthermore, there must be clear accountability and systemic reform to prevent unallocated funds from languishing again, including regular public reporting on how these recovered resources are being deployed in 2026 and beyond.

SAFTU reiterates that NSFAS is not a luxury or a favour to students; it is a cornerstone
of South Africa’s social and economic development. Properly funded and well-administered student financial aid is essential to building a skilled, educated workforce and breaking cycles of poverty and exclusion. The recovery of these funds must therefore mark not only a corrective intervention, but the beginning of a more transparent, accountable, and student-centred NSFAS system that genuinely serves the interests of the working class and the poor.

Issued on behalf of the SAFTU General Secretary Zwelinzima Vavi.

For media inquiries, contact the National Spokesperson at:
Newton Masuku
newtonm@saftu.org.za
0661682157
Media Officer
Asive Dyani
0719019564

29/01/2026
28/01/2026

*PRESS ALERT*
*28 January 2026*

*SAFTU, FAWU and BAT Shop Stewards to Address Emergency Press Conference on Heidelberg Plant Closure*

The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) together with the Food and Allied Workers Union (FAWU) will convene an emergency press conference tomorrow following a high-level meeting with British American To***co (BAT) CEO, Mr Steve Poer, regarding the company’s decision to shut down its Heidelberg production plant.

The company has indicated that it intends to cease local manufacturing operations while maintaining its distribution and sales networks in South Africa to continue selling to***co products manufactured elsewhere.

This decision threatens:
• Hundreds of direct jobs
• Many more indirect jobs across the value chain
• Local industrial capacity and manufacturing sovereignty
• Communities already devastated by deindustrialisation and factory closures

SAFTU and FAWU view this move as part of a growing trend of corporate disinvestment and deindustrialisation, where multinational corporations abandon local production while continuing to extract profits from the South African market.

Workers and their representatives will outline:
• The outcomes of the meeting with BAT leadership
• The socio-economic impact of the closure
• Organised labour’s demands to BAT and government
• The programme of action going forward

Speakers:
• Zwelinzima Vavi – General Secretary, SAFTU
• Edwin Maboa – Deputy General Secretary, FAWU
• BAT Shop Stewards Committee representatives

Details:

*Date: Thursday, 29 January 2026*)
*Time: 11:00*
*Venue: SAFTU Head Office, 108 Fox Street, Metropolitan Building, 11th Floor, Johannesburg*

All members of the media are invited to attend.

A statement was issued on behalf of the SAFTU General Secretary Zwelinzima Vavi.

For media inquiries, contact the National Spokesperson at:

Newton Masuku
newtown@saftu.org.za
0661682157
Media Officer
Asive Dyani
0719019564

A progressive march organised by NUMSA,  against imperialism and lawlessness. The arrest of Venezuelan President Nicola’...
24/01/2026

A progressive march organised by NUMSA, against imperialism and lawlessness. The arrest of Venezuelan President Nicola’s Maduro and his wife Culia Flores is blatant attack on national sovereignty, carried out by an empire that believes it can police the world.

We reject Trumpism.
We reject imperialism.
Hands off Venezuela.

24/01/2026

What is striking about His Majesty the King of the Thembu nation is not that we agree with his position — we clearly do not — but that he does not hide where he stands.

Unlike many who pretend to be “neutral” while quietly siding with imperialism, he openly declares his position.

And that honesty, ironically, helps us educate workers, because it exposes the real nature of these global divisions.

Firstly, His Majesty justifies his support for Israel on religious grounds.

He speaks as if today’s Israeli state is the same as the Israel of biblical times — as if modern geopolitics is scripture, and as if bombs, occupation and war are somehow holy.

This is one of the biggest pieces of propaganda used to justify genocide.

The state that is slaughtering women and children in Gaza did not exist in biblical times. It did not fall from heaven. It was created in 1948 through settler-colonialism, land dispossession and the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.

This is not religion.
This is modern colonialism backed by Western imperial powers.

And there is an even deeper contradiction.

The very people he is trying so hard to impress — calling them “children of Jesus Christ” — are not even Christians.

They are Jewish.

Judaism and Christianity are two different religions with different beliefs and theology. Judaism does not recognise Jesus as the son of God.

So how can Benjamin Netanyahu suddenly be described as a “son of Jesus”?

This is not theology.
It is political manipulation dressed up as faith.

Religion is being abused to sanitise occupation, apartheid and mass killing.

Genocide cannot be baptised with scripture.

Secondly, His Majesty says he is “no longer with the East but now with the West.”

This reveals another dangerous way of thinking.

It suggests that human rights are not a principle, but something that depends on which global power you align with.

Yesterday, abuses were tolerated because they came from the East.
Today, abuses are tolerated because they come from the West.

So morality changes depending on who commits the crime.

Some of us reject that completely.

For the working class, injustice is injustice — no matter who commits it.

Human rights abuse is human rights abuse.
Colonialism is colonialism.
Imperialism is imperialism.
Oligarchy is oligarchy.

It does not matter whether it comes from Washington, Moscow, London or Beijing.

We do not choose between empires.

We stand with the oppressed everywhere — always.

That is the politics of principle.
That is international solidarity.
That is the position of the working class.

23/01/2026

Address

108 Fox Street
Marshallstown
2000

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