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The massacre constituted the most lethal use of force by South African security forces against civilians since the Soweto uprising in [ 1 ] and has been compared to the Sharpeville massacre. The massacre occurred on the seventh day of an unauthorized wildcat strike at the mine which was launched without the endorsement of the National Union of Mineworkers NUM. The strikers sought a wage increase to be negotiated outside the existing collective wage agreement.
When the NUM refused to represent their demands and Lonmin refused to meet with them, the mineworkers launched the strike on 10 August On 11 August, senior representatives of the NUM opened fire on the strikers as they marched towards the NUM's office; two wounded strikers were wrongly reported killed, vastly heightening tensions.
During this period, ten people were killed. Five of them β three strikers and two SAPS members β were killed in a single confrontation on 13 August. In addition, two Lonmin security officers were killed on 12 August, and three other Lonmin mine employees were killed in isolated incidents for which strikers are presumed to be responsible. The massacre on 16 August was the result of the decision by SAPS forcibly to disperse the striking mineworkers, who throughout the week had gathered on a public koppie Afrikaans for a small hilltop neighbouring the mine.
The shooting took place at two locations, with 17 people fatally wounded at each location. The official figure for strikers injured during the shooting is The Lonmin strike ended on 18 September with a wage agreement securing an 11 to 22 percent wage increase for workers. The strikers returned to work on 20 September. In the interim, however, similar wildcat strikes were initiated at other mines across South Africa.
This wave of strikes led President Jacob Zuma to deploy the national military to the platinum-mining belt in mid-September and collectively made the most protest -filled year in the country since the end of apartheid. In the aftermath of the massacre, Lonmin mineworkers were arrested and charged with the murder of their colleagues on 16 August; the charges were ultimately dropped amid public outcry.