About 1,000 workers at South Africa's Medupi power station fired: Eskom

Reuters

Published Mar 27, 2015 03:36AM ET

Updated Mar 27, 2015 05:12PM ET

About 1,000 workers at South Africa's Medupi power station fired: Eskom

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - About 1,000 workers at the construction site of South Africa's Eskom [ESCJ.UL] Medupi power plant have been fired for vandalizing property during this week's one-day strike, the power utility's spokesman said on Friday.

About 21,000 contract workers went on a one-day strike on Wednesday over poor living conditions and seeking higher pay.

"Some of the workers have received text messages for them not to come today, they have been fired," Khulu Phasiwe told Reuters, adding that they were not Eskom's employees but belonged to firms contracted to build the plant.

Murray & Roberts (J:MURJ) and Actom, a unit of France's Alstom SA (PA:ALSO), are some of the companies building the coal-fired power plant.

No one was immediately available to comment at both firms.

The National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA)said it would fight the dismissals and threatened more strikes at the plant.

"No worker will return to work when 1,000 workers are fired. This will just make them stay away for longer," said Steve Nhlapo, NUMSA's head of collective bargaining.

"You can't fire workers by text, there are procedures to follow and unions to consult."

Labor disruption and technical faults have increased costs at the long-delayed Medupi coal plant, expected to start generating 800 megawatts of extra electricity by July.