Sign In

Delhi News Daily

  • Home
  • Fashion
  • Business
  • World News
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
Reading: South African party launches legal challenge to new labour equity laws – Times of India – Delhi News Daily
Share

Delhi News Daily

Font ResizerAa
Search
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Delhi News Daily > Blog > World News > South African party launches legal challenge to new labour equity laws – Times of India – Delhi News Daily
World News

South African party launches legal challenge to new labour equity laws – Times of India – Delhi News Daily

delhinewsdaily
Last updated: May 6, 2025 4:41 pm
delhinewsdaily
Share
SHARE


South African party launches legal challenge to new labour equity laws
Workers advertise their skills looking for work outside a hardware store in a Johannesburg suburb (Image: AP)

JOHANNESBURG: South Africa’s second biggest political party launched a legal challenge Tuesday against a new labour law aimed at boosting the hiring of Black people and other groups in some industries, arguing it is unconstitutional, discriminatory and dampens foreign investment.The challenge by theDemocratic Alliance, or DA, takes aim at amendments to the Employment Equity Amendment Act that went into effect in January. Intended to force companies to diversify their staff, the new laws have divided the country’s unity government, which includes the DA. The measures have drawn fire from the US government under President Donald Trump, who has cited “racist laws” as part of his reasons to cut financial aid to the country and offer to support the relocation of its minority Afrikaner community to the US. The recent amendments give the labour minister the power to set numerical targets for the hiring of Black people, women and people with disabilities in sectors identified by the government as not reaching certain targets. Companies face fines for not reaching the targets. Helen Zille, the federal chairperson of the Democratic Alliance, has described the new law as “totalitarian” and says it discriminates against other groups of South Africans while potentially discouraging foreign direct investment. “Jobs are created by companies that invest in South Africa. The draconian labour regime created by the Employment Equity Amendment Act will continue to drive away investment and predictably increase unemployment,” Zille said. She said the new law is aimed at using racial quotas to address the injustices of the past, and that it would contribute to the country’s unemployment rate, which now stands at over 32 per cent. She said such discrimination in the past has failed to lift up marginalised groups. “It is completely senseless to knowingly intensify a discriminatory regime that has already failed so spectacularly to empower economically marginalised people,” Zille said. Though South Africa’s constitution allows some discrimination to make amends for past injustice, it must meet a fairness threshold that the DA argues is not met under the new measures, which it describes as “draconian.” Official government statistics show that racial and gender disparities in the country’s economy remain widespread more than 30 years after the end of the country’s white minority rule when Black people faced racial discrimination. The African National Congress party, which is the biggest party in the unity government after losing its parliamentary majority in the 2024 national elections, criticised the Democratic Alliance for its court challenge. “The Employment Equity Act is not about quotas. It is about justice,” ANC spokesperson Mahlengi Bhengu-Motsiri said. “It is about correcting structural imbalances in the economy and ensuring that all South Africans have a fair shot at opportunity.” It is the latest public spat between the two biggest parties in the unity government who remain ideologically opposed on many issues. The parties also are divided on education and land reform policies dealing with addressing inequalities created under apartheid, the system of segregation under white minority rule which ended in 1994. Two weeks ago the government withdrew plans to increase a value-added tax paid on consumer goods after the DA and most opposition parties opposed it and refused to vote for the budget which contained the tax increase.





Source link

Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article Tariffs could wreck what Bangladesh’s garment workers have gained – Delhi News Daily
Next Article Yemen’s Sanaa airport ‘completely destroyed’ in Israeli strike, say officials – Times of India – Delhi News Daily
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • ‘Drake vs Kendrick”: Internet turns Musk-Trump fallout into ‘Mean Girls’ memes; calls it a ‘beautiful breakup’ – Times of India – Delhi News Daily
  • ‘Women Wearing Less Are Like Politicians Who…’: Kailash Vijayvargiya Draws Bizarre Comparison – Delhi News Daily
  • Trump-Musk feud: Have all Epstein files been released? What we know so far – Times of India – Delhi News Daily
  • Stock market Holiday 2025: Are Indian exchanges NSE and BSE shut for Bakrid today? – Delhi News Daily
  • Chenab Rail Bridge: the Tech Behind the World’s Highest Railway Bridge – Delhi News Daily

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

You Might Also Like

World News

Tour de France’s new Montmartre climb could be a game changer. It sparks controversy | World News – Times of India – Delhi News Daily

Tour de France's new Montmartre climb could be a game changer. It sparks controversy (AP) PARIS: Breaking with tradition at…

8 Min Read
World News

Make sure the door remains closed’: Trump gives marital advice to Macron after viral video of wife shoving him – Times of India – Delhi News Daily

US President Trump when asked about the incident during a press conference in the Oval Office (Image credits: AP) US…

4 Min Read
World News

Operation Sindoor: Indian-American lawmakers voice their support, back India’s right to self-defence – Times of India – Delhi News Daily

Indian-American lawmakers voice their support, back India’s right to self-defence (Picture credit: ANI, AP) Operation Sindoor: Indian-American lawmakers voice support…

6 Min Read
World News

Thousands storm aid warehouse in Gaza as hunger crisis deepens – Times of India – Delhi News Daily

DEIR EL-BALAH: Thousands of desperate Palestinians stormed a United Nations warehouse in central Gaza on Wednesday, with the World Food…

8 Min Read

Delhi News Daily

© Delhi News Daily Network.

Incognito Web Technologies

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?