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South African Post Office (SA Post Office) is the national postal service of South Africa and as a state owned enterprise, its only shareholder is the South African government. In terms of South African law, the Post Office is the only entity that is legally allowed to accept reserved mail, and as such, it operates a monopoly. [ 3 ]
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South African Party: 1912 1912 Leuchars George 16 April 1858 10 February 1924 Botha, L. South African Party 1912 1915 Watt Thomas 1857 1947 Botha, L. South African Party 1915 1919 Beck: Johannes Hendricus Meiring 28 November 1855 15 May 1919 Botha, L. South African Party 1919 1920 Orr Thomas 1874 Smuts, J. C. South African Party 1920 1921 Graaff
The act split the SAPT into Telkom SA ltd., a wholly state owned communications company, The South African Post Office, and a much smaller Department of Posts and Telecommunications, the task of which is to administer the Radio and Post Office Acts. [1]
This is a list of postal entities by country. It includes: The governmental authority responsible for postal matters. The regulatory authority for the postal sector. Postal regulation may include the establishment of postal policies, postal rates, postal services offered, budgeting for and financing postal operations.
The Communication Workers Union (CWU) is a trade union representing ICT and postal workers in South Africa.. The union was founded in May 1996, when the Post and Telecommunication Workers' Association (POTWA) merged with two small staff associations: the Post Office Employees' Association, and the South African Post Telecommunication Employees' Association.
The Post and Telecommunication Workers' Association (POTWA) was a trade union representing workers in the communications industry in South Africa. The union was founded in January 1986 in Soweto, led by Khabisi Mosunkutu. It had 10,000 members by the end of the year, and soon affiliated to the Congress of South African Trade Unions.