MARIKANA, South Africa Thousands of angry South African workers met Tuesday on a rocky cliff within sight of their platinum mine shuttered by violent protests, shouting demands for more pay over the roar of circling police and military helicopters.
As authorities pleaded for calm, the men trekked there from the simple hostels and shacks near the Lonmin PLC mine, carrying pipes, clubs and machetes across the barren fields with high-tension electrical wires overhead.
As the workers met, the body of a middle-aged man who had been bludgeoned to death was found about 109.4 yards away. Police were investigating the crime, but the man appeared to be the 10th person killed at the Lonmin mine in unrest that is gripping South Africas mining industry.
The rage involves longtime struggles and low pay faced by miners in a nation whose economy depends on cheap labor pulling precious minerals from the ground. A struggle between two labor unions also has been blamed.
The unrest at the Lonmin mine began Friday, as some 3,000 workers walked off the job over pay in what management described as an illegal strike.
Those who tried to work Saturday were attacked, management and the National Union of Mineworkers said.
On Sunday, the rage became deadly as a crowd killed two security guards there by setting their car ablaze, authorities said.
By Monday, angry mobs killed two other workers and overpowered police, killing two officers, officials said. Officers opened fire, killing three others, police said.
Operations appeared to come to a standstill Tuesday as workers stayed away from the mines, where 96 percent of all Lonmins platinum production comes from. The stoppage spooked those investing in Lonmin, the worlds third largest platinum producer. Lonmins shares fell by 4.94 percent Tuesday at the London Stock Exchange.
Barnard O. Mokwena, an executive vice president for Lonmin, said the company continued to meet with the police regarding the violence. Until we know why 3,000 people are under this influence to kill ... people, its hard for us to believe this is a genuine complaint about the rights of workers, Mokwena said.
While Fridays walkout appeared to be about wages, the ensuing violence has been fueled by the struggles between the dominant National Union of Mineworkers and the upstart Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union. Disputes between the two unions escalated into violence earlier this year at another mine.
Both unions have blamed each other for the killings and attacks at the mine at Marikana, about 40 miles northwest of Johannesburg.
Attempts by The Associated Press to reach members of the rival unions were unsuccessful Tuesday as some miners threatened journalists and beat on their cars with sticks, machetes and pipes. No journalists were harmed.
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