• Vusimusi Hlope was dismissed after raising concerns about his wages, setting off a protracted legal struggle. 
  • Integrated Business Supply repeatedly ignored MEIBC and Labour Court orders, using delaying tactics to block reinstatement. 
  • The company’s directors now face jail for contempt of court as the dismissed worker fight for justice may finally reach resolution. 

For Vusimusi Hlope, what began as a simple concern about unpaid wages in September 2021 became a battle that has consumed years of his life. Dismissed for speaking up, he was left grappling not only with financial insecurity but also the frustration of seeing a legal system repeatedly challenged by those who were meant to respect it.  

Every court order in his favour felt like a fragile promise as Integrated Business Supply refused to reinstate him, forcing Hlope into a relentless dismissed worker fight for justice that has tested his resilience at every turn. 

From MEIBC ruling to Labour Court contempt 

The Metal and Engineering Industries Bargaining Council (MEIBC) found the dismissal substantially unfair and ordered that Hlope be reinstated with effect from 28 October 2022. Integrated Business Supply defied the order, prolonging the dismissed worker fight for justice and leaving him without the employment he was legally owed.  

In November 2023, the Labour Court found the company’s three directors Evan and Michael Linley, and Karien Stassen guilty of contempt of court. They were fined R150 000, suspended for 30 days on condition they reinstate Hlope. Despite this, the directors neither reinstated him nor paid the fine. 

Stalingrad tactics and legal persistence 

Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR), who took on Hlope’s case in 2024, faced what they described as a Stalingrad legal strategy. The organisation launched multiple reviews and rescission applications designed to stall enforcement of the 2023 contempt ruling. Even at the most recent hearing, Integrated Business Supply attempted to argue procedural technicalities to avoid accountability.  

The judge rejected these tactics and ordered the directors to appear in person at the Labour Court on 11 November 2025. Should they fail to provide a satisfactory explanation, they face imprisonment, with costs awarded against the company. 

David Dickinson, attorney at LHR, said, “This has been a long and difficult legal struggle, with the company using every tactic to defy the law. Finally, we have hope that Hlope’s dismissed worker fight for justice will end and that he will receive the remedy he deserves.” 

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