Insight
I stand with factory workers
Published
4 years agoon
By
The Post
A friend of mine, Daniel Tsikoane, was excited when he found a pair of jeans written “Made in Lesotho” in Johannesburg, South Africa. We had a moment to reflect on the matter of working conditions of a worker who made him look good. Truth be told when we slip into our favourite pair of branded jeans, we hardly ever think about its origin or the impact it must have had on the life of the person who made them.
Overconsumption in the developed countries we supply especially the United States is encouraging more and more brands to bring cheaper collections to the market at an accelerated pace. This, in turn, means garment workers, who are typically female, are faced with longer working hours, low pay, verbal abuse and unsafe working conditions.
It has been three weeks since factory workers went on strike to protest low pay. The factory workers are demanding that the government must retrospectively gazette a new minimum wage for the previous 2020/21 financial year before gazetting a new one for the current financial year.
They want a 20 percent increment for the previous year.
I invited young factory workers to a youth programme I produce on 357fm every Wednesday to tell us why they wanted a wage hike. It was an interesting programme getting to know the needs of factory workers.
On the eve of my Wednesday programme last week, which also happened to be Heroes Day holiday, the factory workers for the first time began protesting on a holiday and in the evening. I know a lot of my friends on Facebook questioned their timing and the damage on property they caused. I do not agree with the damage caused on property but factory workers had no other option. Governments have tendencies of ignoring lowly paid workers such as factory workers. Factory workers need to do extraordinary things in order to be heard.
One single parent who is a factory worker at Thetsane factories, who gets paid M1 900 a month, said she just could not take it anymore. I have decided not to mention her name because that could cost her employment.
“The highest wage I ever got was literally M1 900 without overtime,” she said. “I cannot take it anymore. I have to pay rent, buy food, clothing, electricity, pay school fees and transport for my child. I cannot cope. I am struggling in this poverty,” she said.
“This job is not worth M1900. I need M3000 now.”
Yet she and thousands of workers across the country will have to wait. The government Covid-19 stimulus package did not include a measure to raise the minimum wage for factory workers. Some of my friends argue that the government has a whole host of challenges when things like a pandemic hit. A minimum wage for factory workers is the last item on the government’s priorities.
They argue that if the minimum wage was to increase, they predict a drop in overall employment. However, they forget that more than 40 000 factory workers would be lifted out of poverty. Others argue that investors will pack and go where labour is cheap. While I agree it is a possibility, it is difficult to offer specifics on what a higher minimum wage might do to employment.
For example, if someone who works overtime to complement the minimum wage can make the same amount of money working without overtime, that would be a positive development for that person. Secondly investors will not lose money because they are already spending over M3000 per month on one person because of the overtime done.
Oftentimes discussions about how much and how often to raise the minimum wage get positioned in relation to potential harm to business: how much can businesses bear to pay for a month of labour before they are negatively impacted?
However, I argue that an increase in the minimum wage can actually be good for business. Low-wage workers who have enough money to meet their household needs, you know, like paying the rent and buying food.
These workers tend to spend every extra loti they earn. Pumping that money back into the economy, through consumer spending, fuels growth and increases sales for local businesses. When factory workers get paid Maseru becomes busy, banks, street vendors, mobile network operators, owners of apartments, local supermarkets, taxi owners all make money.
It make sense that an increase in their wages would mean a boost to both their individual well-being and that of the business they work for, reducing stress at home and boosting their productivity on the job. An undernourished worker who is worried about how to pay the bills at the end of the month is unlikely to be contributing all he or she could to the overall success of a business.
The other argument they make is that the economy is not doing well under Covid-19 pandemic. I will be the first to admit that the Covid-19 pandemic has not only taken away jobs, uprooted homes, led to starvation, especially during the initial phase of the lockdown, but it has destroyed livelihoods of thousands of people. With no job security, workers had been left unpaid, and unheard.
However let me also remind you that it was during the Covid-19 pandemic that Parliament passed a law that increased the salaries for MPs: M5 000 petrol allowance and M3000 house allowance. Besides factory workers continue doing overtime opportunities which gives them over M3000 per month. If employers can afford M3000 with overtime included then it means they can pay factory workers M3000 per month as minimum wage.
The saying, “What is good for the goose is good for the gander,” states that something that is good for one should be good for all. Well, recent salary hike for MPs have provided evidence that MPs are flourishing.
However, what is good for MPs is not always good for factory workers. Without doubt, Prime Minister Moeketsi Majoro believes what is good for the goose is not always good for the gander.
Nevertheless I think it is fair enough to say that what is good for the goose, in this case, MPs salary hike, is good for the gander, factory worker minimum wage increase. The Government of Lesotho must release the gazette which will introduce the new minimum wage for factory workers and stop delaying tactics.
In their attempt to protest for minimum wage increase two workers have lost their lives and many others were injured. Is Prime Minister Majoro waiting for more to die before agreeing to the minimum wage increase? MPs did not have to protest to get a salary hike. For some reason some animals are more equal than others. But my conscience does not allow me to forget the plight of the poor factory workers. Therefore I stand with factory workers in their struggle for better working conditions and better salary.
Ramahooana Matlosa
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The year 2024 is behind us now. It was a year in which we were told Basotho were 200 years old as a nation. The facts tell us differently. If we follow them, Basotho nation was 204 years old in 2024. Also, if we follow the facts, Basotho nation was established in Botha Bothe, not Thaba Bosiu.
None of this may matter very much but it must be known. Botha Bothe has been denied its rightful place as a place where the Basotho nation was formed.
Like an older man who is fond of younger girls, or an older woman who is fond of younger boys, we reduced our age mainly in order to suit the significance that has been accorded Thaba Bosiu at the expense of Basotho’s other mountain fortresses — for example, Mount Moorosi and Botha Bothe Mountain.
They say history is written by the victors, and the powerful. Until our current social order changes, what the powerful consider to be the truth will remain as it was given to us in 2024 — that, as a nation we were 200 years old in 2024, and that the Basotho nation emerged at their one and only fortress, Thaba Bosiu.
This story had to remain this way because too much political and financial investment has gone into Thaba Bosiu, and we cannot afford to change stories about it.
This article is not about quibbling about how old we are as a nation, and where the Basotho nation was formed. Rather the article is about what we achieved in 2004 in our celebration of 200 years of our nationhood.
Out of lack of any interest, or out of lacking any ideas, our politicians kept mum about what they would like to see the nation achieve as part of our celebrations. So, justifiably, they can tell us to bugger off, if we ask them whether they have anything to show from the 2024 celebrations. We cannot bother them about what we achieved because they never made any promises.
In November, 2024, a friend was asked at a public seminar: What lessons have we learnt about Basotho pre-colonial political leadership during our 200th anniversary celebrations?
In response, he made one of the most brilliant statements that can be made about what happened in Lesotho during 2024. He said, in 2024 all we did was, on the one hand, to be nostalgic about the good old past where political leaders (i.e. chiefs) respected their followers, communities shared what they had, and, within communities, human security was guaranteed everyone.
On the other hand, we continued to treat one another the way we always do: we continued to employ socio-economic systems—and to practise policies—that are responsible for socio-economic inequality in Lesotho, where many families, including children, go to bed hungry every day.
One of the things we should have done to celebrate 2024 years of our existence as a nation was to re-consider our adoption of systems and policies that leave many Basotho poor and hungry.
For having done none of this, as a nation, we remain with serious problems that need to be stated repeatedly because it seems that those in power do not get to see them in reality.
Being given just the numbers of hungry families, and being told, with satisfaction, that they are falling, will always be meaningless when you meet a hungry woman with a child on her back, and holding another by the hand—as we do in our villages—asking for food, or money to buy food.
In official statistics, she may be a single case that does not change the fact that government is succeeding in the distribution of food aid. That is not the way she may see things.
To her, she and her children are not part of some percentage—20%, 10%, 15%, etc.—that government may not have reached. She and her children are 100%, and more. They are not 20% hungry; they are more than 100% hungry.
Neither did the killing, the rape and abuse of children and the elderly stop in 2024, nor did we take the celebration of our nationhood as an opportunity to think about how to stop all this.
We are a deeply unequal society with very unacceptable indicators of human security. Action to address the welfare of the most vulnerable sections of society—women, children, the elderly—remains terribly inadequate.
Their lot remains poverty, hunger and fear for their lives.
In our celebrations of 200 years of our nationhood, perhaps one of the things we should have done is to commit ourselves to the formulation of a socio-economic system that secures the welfare of the most vulnerable sections of society.
I closed last week by recording the dreadful news that trashy Trump had been elected called to mind WB Yeats’s poem “The Second Coming.” This is the poem whose opening lines gave Chinua Achebe the phrase “things fall apart.”
Yeats observes “Things fall apart, the centre cannot hold / Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.”
It was written in 1919 and controversially uses Christian imagery relating to the Apocalypse and the Second Coming to reflect on the atmosphere in Europe following the slaughter of the First World War and the devastating flu epidemic that followed this.
It also reflects on the Irish War of Independence against British rule.
In lines that I can now read as if applying to the recent American election, Yeats mourns: “The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity.”
And then I can visualise Trump in the poem’s closing lines: “What rough beast is this, its hour come round at last, / Slouching towards Bethlehem to be born?”
Trump is certainly a rough beast and isn’t the choice of verb, slouching, just perfect? For a non-allegorical account of the threat posed by the Dump, I can’t do better than to quote (as I often do) that fine South African political journalist, Will Shoki. In his words: “Trump’s administration simply won’t care about Palestinians, about the DRC, about the Sudanese.
It will be indifferent to the plight of the downtrodden and the oppressed, who will be portrayed as weak and pathetic. And it will give carte blanche [that is, free rein] to despotism and tyranny everywhere.
Not even social media, that once revered third-space we associated with subversion and revolution in the first quarter of the 21st century can save us because Silicon Valley is in Trump’s back pocket.”
So what follows the triumph of the Dump? We can’t just sit down and moan and bemoan. In a more recent piece of hers than the one I quoted last week, Rebecca Solnit has observed: “Authoritarians like Trump love fear, defeatism, surrender. Do not give them what they want . . . We must lay up supplies of love, care, trust, community and resolve — so we may resist the storm.”
Katt Lissard tells me that on November 7th following the confirmation of the election result, in the daytime and well into the evening in Manhattan, New York, there was a large demonstration in support of the immigrants Trump despises.
And a recent piece by Natasha Lennard gives us courage in its title “The Answer to Trump’s Victory is Radical Action.”
So, my Basotho readers, how about the peaceful bearing of some placards in front of the US Embassy in Maseru? Because the Dump doesn’t like you guys and gals one little bit.
One last morsel. I had intended to end this piece with the above call to action, but can’t resist quoting the following comment from the New York Times of November 13th on Trump’s plans to appoint his ministers.
I’m not sure a satirical gibe was intended (the clue is in the repeated use of the word “defence”), but it made me guffaw nonetheless. “Trump will nominate Pete Hegseth, a Fox News host with no government experience, as his defence secretary. Hegseth has often defended Trump on TV.” You see, it’s all about the Dump.
- Chris Dunton is a former Professor of English and Dean of Humanities at the National University of Lesotho.
Recently, an audio recording featuring the distressed MP for Thaba-Bosiu Constituency, Joseph Malebaleba, circulated on social media. The MP appears to have spent a sleepless night, struggling with the situation in which he and his associates from the Revolution for Prosperity (RFP) party were denied a school feeding tender valued at M250 million per annum.
In 2022, Lesotho’s political landscape underwent a significant shift with the emergence of the RFP led by some of the country’s wealthiest individuals. Among them was Samuel Ntsokoane Matekane, arguably one of the richest people in Lesotho, who took the helm as the party’s leader and ultimately, the Prime Minister of Lesotho.
The RFP’s victory in the general election raised eyebrows, and their subsequent actions have sparked concerns about the motivations behind their involvement in politics.
In an interview with an American broadcasting network just after he won the elections, Matekane made a striking statement, proclaiming that he would run Lesotho exactly as he runs his business.
At first glance, many thought he was joking, but as time has shown, his words were far from an idle threat. In the business world, the primary goal is to maximize profits, and it appears that the RFP is adopting a similar approach to governance.
Behind the scenes, alarming developments have been unfolding. A communication from an RFP WhatsApp group revealed a disturbing request from the Minister of Communications, Nthati Moorosi, who asked if anyone in the group had a construction business and could inbox her.
This raises questions about the RFP’s focus on using government resources to benefit their own business interests.
The government has been embroiled in a series of scandals that have raised serious concerns about the ethical conduct of its officials. Recent reports have revealed shocking incidents of misuse of public funds and conflicts of interest among key government figures.
Over the past two years, the RFP has been accused of awarding government contracts to companies affiliated with their members, further solidifying concerns about their self-serving agenda. For instance, vehicles purchased for the police were allegedly sourced from suppliers connected to a Minister’s son and MP.
The MP for Peka, Mohopoli Monokoane, was found to have hijacked fertiliser intended to support impoverished farmers, diverting crucial resources away from those in need for personal gain.
Such actions not only betray the trust of the public but also have a direct impact on the livelihoods of vulnerable communities. Monokoane appeared before the courts of law this week.
While farmers voice their concerns regarding fertiliser shortages, it seems that Bishop Teboho Ramela of St. Paul African Apostolic Church, who is also a businessman, is allegedly involved in a corrupt deal concerning a M10 million fertilizer allocation, benefiting from connections with wealthy individuals in government.
The procurement of fertiliser appears to be mired in controversy; recall that the Minister of Agriculture, Food Security and Nutrition, Thabo Mofosi, was also implicated in the M43 million tender.
The renovation of government buildings with elaborate lighting systems was contracted to a company owned by the son of an MP. The RFP’s enthusiasm for infrastructure development, specifically road construction and maintenance, is also tainted by self-interest, as they have companies capable of performing these tasks and supplying the necessary materials, such as asphalt.
Minister Moteane finds himself in a compromising situation regarding a lucrative M100 million airport tender that was awarded to his former company. Ministers have even gone so far as to award themselves ownership of diamond mines.
Meanwhile, the nation struggles with national identification and passport shortages, which according to my analysis the RFP seems hesitant to address until they can find a way to partner with an international company that will benefit their own interests.
The people of Lesotho are left wondering if their leaders are truly committed to serving the nation or simply lining their own pockets. As the RFP’s grip on power tightens, the consequences for Lesotho’s democracy and economy hang precariously in the balance.
It is imperative that citizens remain vigilant and demand transparency and accountability from their leaders, lest the nation slide further into an era of self-serving governance.
In conclusion, the RFP’s dominance has raised serious concerns about the motives behind their involvement in politics. The apparent prioritisation of personal profit over public welfare has sparked widespread disillusionment and mistrust among the population.
As Lesotho navigates this critical juncture, it is essential that its leaders are held accountable for their actions and that the nation’s best interests are placed above those of individuals.
Only through collective effort and a strong commitment to transparency and accountability can Lesotho ensure a brighter future for all its citizens.
Ramahooana Matlosa
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