On my way to Mamelodi January 2018 |
As so called black middle class, we pretend to be detached
from the working class struggles such as the trade unions' fights against labour
brokers and the shocking service from Metro Rail. We lie to ourselves that we are not affected
by these events. Beginning September 2017 after exactly 10 years in the same
job I had a decision to make. Do I stop my piggery project in Zimbabwe that I had
already invested over $20 000 and concentrate working here in South Africa? It
was not a very difficult decision to make as I did not see any career growth prospects
so the next day I started serving my 4 weeks’ notice. Running a project in
Zimbabwe whilst staying in another country is a challenge and especially when
it comes to money issues it becomes even trickier. When a customer pays when you are not there you might never see a cent. So every two weeks either I
or my wife would go to Zimbabwe to make sure that we buy stock feed and monitor
the project. I have seen many people in the diaspora sending money for projects
such as building a house and only for money to be squandered by relatives. In
2010 we also lost about $1 000 meant for plumbing when a close relative
ran away leaving our small children with workers at our house in Zimbabwe.
My late cousin spent more than a decade in the United
Kingdom and he sent a haulage truck and money to buy cattle, residential stands
etc. When he came back to Zimbabwe around 2010 he had nothing and had to start
constructing a house in Chitungwiza and when he died a few years ago he had not
done much construction at his house. So on 2 October 2017, on the day I
finished serving my notice, I took a bus to Harare that night. Travelling by bus is the
cheapest way to get to Harare from Pretoria as it costs around R400 as long as
you have time. I would spend most of October in Mutoko and I managed to buy
about 6 tonnes of maize bran at about 40% of the price I had paid to farmers
nearer to Chivhu where my piggery project is located. That feed would last me
about 2 months. After transporting the animal feed, I came back to concentrate
on my small transport venture in South Africa.
In December 2017, I had about 2 dozens of pigs ready for
market and the price I was getting from our local butcheries was around $3 per
kg. At times it would take between 2 weeks to 2 months to get paid even though the
butcheries would sell the pigs within a few days. In December 2017, there was a
huge demand of pork, where some supermarkets would sell pork for around $9 per
kg, however for us farmers we never got to benefit from this windfall. I know
of many small scale producers who had to stop pig farming as the status quo
only favoured retailers and not farmers. In February 2018, I decided to increase my
production so that I could raise 600pigs per year with the aim of opening my
own butcheries. I then decided to go back to work temporarily in order to help
raise the required finance to buy butchery equipment. I responded to a six
month contract position at a big financial institution through what I thought
was an employment agent and this suited me very well.
In the second week of February 2018, I went for an interview
at the big campus closer to Florida. Two days later the agent told me, I had
done very well and the company wanted to hire me. I was not very sure if I
wanted to go. The agent had indicated that I might start on Monday. On Friday
morning I had an appointment to transport a load for a client in Pretoria East.
The client then asked me if I could transport an urgent load to Zimbabwe that
day. When you are self-employed you do not let work pass by. By early evening
on Friday morning, I was on my way to Zimbabwe. On the Zimbabwean side, I
really battled with tyre punctures as I was carrying a heavy load and I only
reached Hwedza on Sunday morning. I then drove home to Zimre Park took a bath
and drove to Chivhu to check on my piggery project and then drove back to South
Africa.
After driving two nights without much sleep I ended up
sleeping in Polokwane. Around 8am on Monday the agent phoned me and I was still in
Polokwane. When I arrived in Pretoria she phoned me again and I told her that I
was not sure if I wanted to take up the job offer. After discussing the issue
further, I told her I would start work tomorrow. I took Gautrain to Park
Station very early in the morning as I hate being late especially for work.
There was no way, I would drive 130km every day to and from work and put that
much mileage on any of my cars. I went to Reya Vaya bus station and they said
they don’t have buses going there. I then went to Metro Rail wanting to buy a
ticket to Florida and the ticket seller told me that the train was running
late. My only option was to go to a mini bus taxi. Given my experience with
taxi drivers, I avoid them like a plague. I arrived at work around 07:30am and
waited for human resources. I had to sign a few declaration forms but there was
no employment contract.I ended up discussing with one of the guys who had started a
few weeks earlier who informed me that the bank had a huge backlog and had
employed a lot of contract workers and more were on their way.
I would spend
the day in the claims department with a kind gentleman who was showing me the
systems. The agent also phoned me and confirmed that she had e-mailed me the
employment contract and this was a bit strange why the agent and not the bank was giving me the contract. After work, I ran 3km to Florida station to catch the Metro Rail
train to Park Station. I can write books about my experience with Metro Rail
shocking service as I used it almost every day from Pretoria Central to
Mamelodi and then run 5km to Pretoria East and vice versa in the evening from
November 2017 until March 2018 when I was self-employed. The way Prasa runs the
commuter train service is pathetic; they do not care about passengers as well
as the safety of their staff. I feel sorry for tens of thousands of commuters
from Mamelodi who are now suffering ever since Metro Rail suspended the
service. Some of these commuters are students, unemployed, factory workers,
security guards, domestic workers etc. who are mostly people who are on minimum wage. A six day week monthly taxi fare costs around R720 whereas a monthly train ticket costs about R160 and for a person on a minimum wage or unemployed that is a huge difference. In January 2018 Menlyn Taxi association increased their fees by 25% and they will be increasing again due to high fuel prices you can see the that the inflation for poor people is much more than the official rate of inflation.
After arriving at Florida station I had to ask fellow
passengers about the expected arrival of the train since metro rail do not
operate like Gautrain and they never inform any passengers about anything and
you have to rely on the information from fellow passengers. The train soon
approached around 5pm and we arrived at Park Station around 5:30pm and I disembarked
from the train and I started asking where I could get the Pretoria train and
they pointed out that the train I had disembarked was actually the express
train to Pretoria. I quickly rushed back. The train started moving and skipping
a lot of the stations until we got to Kempton Park and it started stopping for
longer periods without explanation. At a bushy area around Olifantsfontein it
stopped for close to an hour and we just waited. I asked fellow passengers and
they said that was the norm and even in the morning it would behave that way. I only arrived in Pretoria after 9pm and by that time my phone battery had run out and maNyoni was worried about my whereabouts.
luckily in Sunnyside businesses open very late e.g. our Shoprite store opens
from 6am to 11pm Monday to Saturday.
I rushed to the internet cafe’ and printed the employment
contract. I have been in the insurance industry now for 20 years and I am also currently
a law student and one thing I understand in this life is a contract I don’t just
sign anything. I remember some years ago when I had to sign a lease agreement I
had to ask the land lord to amend a few clauses. Reading the employment
contract from the first page onwards, I realised that it did not comply with
the Basic Conditions of Employment Act. I then wrote an e-mail to the agent
pointing all these deficiencies in her contract and also informed her that I
would not be signing it and I was no longer interested in the position. I
gathered if the bank really wanted my services they would employ me directly
and not through some labour broker who had no clue and would get a large
portion of my salary and for what? The next morning I still woke very early as usual and caught a train to Mamelodi to continue with my usual schedule instead of going to Florida
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