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Toll rises to 36 in South Africa's mine shootout | The death toll of Thursday's shootout between the police and miners in
northern South Africa has climbed to 36, a union chief said on Friday morning. "Our
shop-stewards on the ground report that 36 people were killed," the general secretary of the
National
Union of Mineworkers (NUM) Frans Baleni said. Police ministry spokesperson Zweli
Mnisi also confirmed Friday that more than 30 people were dead in the shootout
at the mine, adding that the number of deaths could rise. Baleni said the trade
union was "extremely saddened by this loss of life, it could been avoided." The
general secretary criticized both the police and the miners for the violence,
saying that "police should not be peace brokers," while "workers have a constitutional
right to protest, but have no right to be violent when you protest." The shooting,
seen as one of the deadliest conflict between police and workers since the apartheid
ended in South Africa in 1994, erupted at 4:00 p.m. local time (1400 GMT) on Thursday
as police attempted to disperse armed striking miners at Lonmin's Marikana mine
in the northern province of the North West . Several thousands of miners had gathered
on a hill since Monday, demanding an improvement of working condition by raising
their monthly salary from some 4,000 rands (about 480 U.S.dollars) to 12,500 rands.
Lonmin is the world's third biggest platinum producer headquartered in Johannesburg
with approximately 28,000 employees. Last Friday, about 3,000 drilling miners
at the mine started protests, demanding a 12 percent wage increase. However, the
protests turned into violence in the following days. Up to Wednesday, the violence
at the Marikana mine had claimed 10 lives, including two police officers, two
security guards, three protestors and three other men.
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