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HR: Referee or silent spectator?

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HR is at its best not when it protects one side, but when it protects the integrity of the organisation itself. (Courtesy pic)
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Human Resources is often described as the heart of an organisation, the unit responsible for protecting employee welfare while ensuring the company operates lawfully and effectively.

Yet, in many workplaces, HR sits at the centre of a dilemma: Are they the neutral referee or do they become silent spectators in moments that matter most?

In healthy organisations, HR plays an active, strategic role. They set the tone for fairness, guide leaders on best practice, respond quickly to early warning signs and ensure policies are more than documents on a shelf. When HR is empowered, employees trust the system. When they are not, silence begins to spread and small problems grow into cultural fractures.

The challenge is that HR often operates under significant pressure. They must balance employee well-being with management expectations, handle confidential information and manage conflict without bias. But when organisational values are unclear or leadership behaviours are inconsistent, HR can find itself caught between doing what is right and doing what is politically safe. This tension can render HR ineffective, not by choice, but by circumstance.

A silent HR department becomes dangerous. When legitimate concerns are minimised, delayed or dismissed, employees quickly lose faith in the process.

They stop reporting issues, disengage emotionally or seek external intervention, often turning to the Department of Labour or CMAC when internal channels fail. By the time disputes reach mediation, the damage to trust, performance and team morale is already entrenched.

Globally, research from McKinsey and the Society for Human Resource Management shows that HR effectiveness is one of the strongest predictors of employee engagement and retention.

Employees who trust HR are more likely to speak up early, less likely to resign and more likely to recover from workplace conflict in a healthier way. In Eswatini, many HR practitioners work with limited tools and overwhelming workloads. Policies may be outdated, reporting systems informal or leadership reluctant to enforce accountability. These gaps do not make HR ineffective, they simply highlight the need for support, training and organisational alignment.

For HR to function as a true referee, three conditions must exist:

  • Clear policies and consistent enforcement
  • Leadership willing to act on uncomfortable truths
  • Confidential channels employees can trust

When these elements are present, HR becomes a catalyst for fairness, not a spectator of dysfunction. Because ultimately, HR is at its best not when it protects one side, but when it protects the integrity of the organisation itself.

A strong HR department does not silence conflict, it resolves it, transforms it and helps build workplaces where people can thrive.

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