Cosatu unions take federation to court

Nine Cosatu-affiliated unions have reinstated their court case to compel the trade union federation to hold a special national congress, they said on Wednesday.

"We have reinstated our court case... as the crisis can clearly only be resolved by owners of the federation -- the ordinary members of affiliates of Cosatu," Food and Allied Workers' Union (Fawu) deputy general secretary Moleko Phakedi told reporters in Johannesburg, on behalf of the unions.

"We reject any moves at dismissing Vavi from Cosatu. A special congress must attend to all the matters now raised against him."

An application by the National Union of Metalworkers of SA (Numsa) for an urgent interdict to stop the Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu) holding its central executive committee (CEC) meeting on Friday, will be heard in the High Court in Johannesburg on Thursday.

The unions said the CEC would likely decide to expel Numsa at the meeting so it could "smoothly" deal with Vavi.

Numsa deputy general secretary Karl Cloete said the application was urgent.

"It is an urgent court application... to the extent the court says it is not urgent we will proceed on that basis," he said.

"We hear that if the court were to move in that direction we are likely to get the matter on the roll for March 2015. So be it, we go to March 2015.

"We have a case to make that Cosatu has been turned into a tavern with no rules."

The unions included Numsa, Fawu, the SA Catering, Commercial and Allied Workers' Union, the Democratic Nursing Organisation of SA (Denosa) the SA State and Allied Workers' Union, the Communication Workers' Union, the SA Football Players' Union, and the Public and Allied Workers' Union of SA.

Cloete said the SA Municipal Workers' Union (Samwu) was currently appealing a high court ruling that expulsions and suspensions in the union were unlawful.

"There is an appeal against that judgment. What we can say is that we have nothing whatsoever from Samwu in writing or verbally that it is not part and parcel of the nine unions that have petitioned for the special national congress."

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