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Parties close to agreement: Labour ministry

Parties are close to reaching an agreement that will bring an end to the metals and engineering sector strike, Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant's spokesman said on Monday.

"Parties are very close to an agreement. We are trying to iron out some sticky issues," spokesman Mokgadi Pela said.

There was an all-day meeting on Monday with the employers and it would be followed by one with the National Union of Metalworkers of SA (Numsa).

"The meeting will go well into the night. Talks are at sensitive stage," he said.

Pela refused to give further details of the meeting saying he did not want to pre-empt the outcome.

On Sunday Pela said the "sticky issues" were around labour broking, the youth wage subsidy, and housing.

Numsa members in the metal and engineering sector went on strike on July 1 demanding a 15 percent wage increase and a R1000 housing allowance in a one-year bargaining agreement. The union also demanded that the use of labour brokers should cease.

On Thursday, the employers' organisation -- the Steel and Engineering Industries Federation of SA (Seifsa) -- tabled a three-year wage offer of between eight and 10 percent for different levels of workers in the first year.

The first category of worker was offered seven percent in 2015 and 2016, while the others were offered nine percent in the second year, and eight percent in the final year.

Earlier on Monday, the National Employers' Association of SA (Naesa) said talks to end the wage deadlock had failed to produce a solution. CEO Gerhard Papenfus said the employer body met Numsa on Friday in bilateral negotiations in an attempt to find a resolution.

At the meeting, Neasa confirmed to Numsa its current position that any wage offer was subject to an agreement on the establishment of a reduced entry-level wage in respect of new entries and the adoption of measures to make the industry more flexible, he said.

"It is, however, disappointing that Numsa does not even want to discuss these issues. Without an agreement on these Neasa proposals, we simply cannot see our way open to offer any wage increases," he said.

Naesa has offered eight percent, subject to an agreement for entry-level workers' wages to be lowered and measures to make the industry more flexible.

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