Labour law enforcement throughout the country’s workplaces has become one of the government’s top priorities, Labour Minister Membathisi Mdladlana has warned.
Addressing an Imbizo of domestic workers in Stellenbosch, Western Cape on Sunday, Minister Mdladlana said a general feeling right across the labour market spectrum had always been that law enforcement was in dire need of tightening up to curb the rampant workplace injustices.
“We have since responded by appointing, for the first time, a national chief inspector who will be responsible for coordinating and professionalizing labour law inspectorate to ensure drastic increase in inspection visibility. We have to demonstrate strong intolerance of each and every employer that refuses to obey the law as we cannot have people turning our country into a banana republic,” he said.
Minister Mdladlana stressed, however, that no amount of law enforcement would be enough without the workers themselves, particularly in the domestic sector, organizing themselves through trade unions.
“The best and most effective inspector on any given day is the worker him/herself. If workers themselves to not understand their workplace rights and obligations, complete law enforcement would always be impeded to some extent.”
The one-day Imbizo was preceded by a process whereby the hundreds of domestic employees of the area made use of government facilities at their disposal to register for various services, including Unemployment Insurance Fund and for inclusion in the national job-seekers database.
In a wide-ranging interaction with the Minister and his top management team, workers and some employers posed a variety of questions aimed at helping them understand the law and their responsibilities even better.
The Minister said he was pleased with improved labour relations in the domestic sector where more than 700 000 domestic employers and some 663 000 workers have been registered with the department thus far.
The Minister will on Friday this week take his Imbizo campaign to the Eastern Cape where the Mkhubiso Burnshill rural community in Keiskamahoek will enjoy the same government services brought right at their doorstep.