Thursday, 22 December 2011

Textile production in Tirupur cluster hit by strike


Textile production in Tirupur knitwear cluster was paralysed on Wednesday( 21.12.2011) following the one-day strike observed by leading trade unions condemning the delay in revising workers' wages though the previous wage accord expired a year ago.

Agitated over the textile manufacturers' apathy to the welfare of employees, about 1.5 lakh workers in tailoring, cutting, checking, folding and packing departments in 4,500 units did not attend any shift today.

Trade unions

Trade unions like CITU, INTUC, LPF, MLF and AITUC, which called for the agitation, demanded hike in basic salaries and introduction of perks like house rent allowance and leave travel assistance, among others, in the new wage agreement.

“We are also asking the unit owners to implement the wage agreement with retrospective effect from January 1 this year as the previous wage pact lost its validity in December, 2010,” the union leaders said.
A section of the workers feels that the union leaders are also not fully sincere in pressing for the demands during the wage talks held on the previous occasion.

“Demands like HRA and a few other perks figure in the agenda every year but they are never met. Many unionists are soft in dealing with entrepreneurs contrary to the image they project,” they said.


Saturday, 26 November 2011

The five-legged elephant

Looking back at Shankar Guha Niyogi, 20 years after his assassination.

On September 28, 1991, Shankar Guha Niyogi put aside his copy of Lenin on Trade Unions and Revolutions, and fell asleep under a mosquito net in his room on the ground floor of an apartment in the Bhilai industrial township. In the early hours of the morning, a young man rode up to the house, looked in through the bedroom's well-lit window and shot him dead.

At the time, Niyogi stood at the helm of a movement to unionise the thousands of contract workers employed in factories across what would become the State of Chhattisgarh. Twenty years on, as India appraises the legacy of two decades of economic reforms, Niyogi's life and violent end offer a snapshot of the turbulence that presaged the dawn of the India's ‘New Economy'.
 
Dhiresh Guha Niyogi was born in 1943 in Jalpaigudi, Bengal, and studied in Jalpaigudi and Calcutta. In the early 1960s he came to Bhilai to work at the Bhilai Steel Plant (BSP), and established himself as a labour organiser. BSP was emblematic of the possibilities of India's public sector: the integrated steel plant and township spanned over 22,000 acres, operated captive iron ore mines in Dalli Rajara, limestone quarries in Dani Tola and spawned a network of privately-owned ancillary factories that employed thousands of workers.
In 1967, Niyogi and his colleagues organised one of the BSP's first strikes for better working conditions. A year later he was thrown out of the BSP, and spent the next several years travelling through Chhattisgarh.
In 1970s, a young man who called himself Shankar arrived at the BSP's limestone quarries in Dani Tola. His past was unknown, but he seemed interested in the working conditions at the mine. In time he married an Adivasi called Asha, whose parents worked in the mines.
“Shankar worked in the mines like everyone else,” said Asha in a recent interview, “No one knew much about him, except that he was from Bengal. One day he was in Dalli on some work when some LIB people [local intelligence branch] came to Dani Tola. Indira Gandhi had passed the MISA [Maintenance of Internal Security Act, passed by Parliament in 1973] and the LIB people asked about him.”
 
It was from the LIB that Asha learnt her husband was not ‘Shankar', but unionist Dhiresh Guha Niyogi, who had been thrown out of the BSP for “partybaazi” at a time when State governments were using the MISA to detain those perceived to be working against the establishment. “They arrested him in Dalli.” she said, “We had been married one year.”
“Once released, he set up a bakri [goat] business to show the police he was just running a normal business now,” said Asha with a laugh. “We went from village to village on foot and bought goats which we sold in the markets. But at each village he held meetings where he gave speeches about jagruti [awareness].”
In 1975, Indira Gandhi imposed the Emergency and Niyogi was rearrested. He was released in 1977, a time when the contract workers of Dalli Rajara were contemplating a mass action.
 
“There were about 12,000 contract workers in Dalli,” said Janaklal Thakur, a labour leader who began work in Dalli in 1972. “We were paid about Rs.2 per day for 14- to 16-hour shifts. None of the existing trade unions were willing to represent us, so a group of us approached Niyogiji.”
The contract workers at Dalli had approached the management with a specific demand of raising the yearly bonus; once he arrived, Niyogi made it clear that he envisioned a politics that went beyond wage increments and bonuses.
 
“Will a ten-per-cent increase in our bonus bring revolutionary change to this country?” asked Niyogi in a speech, years later. In 1977, Niyogi, Mr. Thakur and the contract workers of Dalli established the Chhattisgarh Mines Shramik Sangh (CMSS) workers union.
“Niyogiji often said ‘Ours is not an eight-hour union, ours is a 24-hour union'. He was concerned with all aspects of a worker's life: history, education, gender, everything. CMSS set up 17 departments to look into worker welfare,” said Sudha Bhardwaj, a lawyer and trade unionist who came to Dalli in 1986 and taught in a union-run school. “The red and green union flag symbolises the unity of farmer and worker struggles,” she said.
Shahid hospital was one such initiative that began as a dispensary in an unused garage in 1982. Today, it is a self-financed 100-bed hospital dedicated to providing quality low-cost health care to workers and villagers around Dalli.
“Shahid hospital was set up in memory of Kusum bai, an Adivasi woman, who died from a ruptured fallopian tube in 1979 because she had no access to health care. Contract workers could not go to BSP's hospitals,” said Dr. Saibal Jana, who came to Dalli from Calcutta in 1981 and is now the head of Shahid hospital, “By 1983, the hospital had 10 beds and four doctors but no money. So each worker donated a month's mine allowance [Rs.30] to the hospital. We collected about Rs.3 lakh and bought a truck which we leased for about Rs.5,000 per month to cover running costs of the hospital.”
 
By 1990, CMSS had about 10,000 members, and had engineered a series of mass actions and negotiations that ensured that they were amongst the best paid contract workers in the country. “We were making six to seven thousand rupees a month. We had gratuity, cycle allowances, house rent allowances like the permanent workers,” Mr. Thakur said, “The old union leaders told us we would get bonuses only when elephants had five legs. Once when we won a battle with the management, we took out a parade with a statue of such an animal.”
In 1990, Niyogi and the CMSS sought to expand their presence amongst the contract workers in Bhilai's ancillary industries, which were run by a powerful group of industrialists including Moolchand Shah of the Simplex Group, Chandra Kant Shah of Oswal Steel Pvt. Ltd., K.P. Kedia, and B.R. Jain of the famous hawala dairies scandal which entailed illegal payments to some of India's most powerful politicians.
It was then, Niyogi's supporters believe, that a group of businessmen sought to eliminate him. “These businessmen did not allow an independent union … after all, improving work environment and increasing wages would hurt their bottom lines and absurd profit margins,” said journalist and author Sanjay Kapoor, who followed the case.
 
In 1997, a Madhya Pradesh Sessions Court convicted Moolchand Shah, Chandrakant Shah and three others of conspiring to kill Niyogi and sentenced Paltan Mallah, the hired assassin, to death. However, in 2005 the Supreme Court held that there was insufficient evidence to convict the industrialists and commuted Mallah's sentence to life imprisonment.
 
Niyogi is survived by his wife Asha, his three children Kranti, Jeet and Mukti and a legacy of building flexible, broad-based organisations that think beyond the immediacy of the present and the contingent.

Friday, 14 October 2011

The voice and action of the professional workers


The voice of the professional workers
For the past few decades the social problems of the professional workers is surmounting like a Himalayan mountain the employees are squeezed  to deploy the work from their mind, blood and sweat still they have not gained their fruits of their works. It seems there should be some problem in the social architecture of our society, of course yes!
Here is the blog organize by our party as an seed to plant an organized professional workers with whom we can reason out, discuss and fight against the bad things happens to all of us.

When we say about bad thing we suppose to say what they are?
There are 750000 engineering graduates and numerous diploma holders where passed out every year from our Indian educational industries. 

Somebody can say
1. There could not be sufficient job in the society for all of them 
 2. There won’t be a relevant job for all of them 
3. The good job is a credit for who have effort and talents
4. This is only social architecture where we need to struggle and survive 

Government says
1.      Self Employment 
2.      Birth control
3.      Some time even subsidy for the unemployed 

By seeing all the above points everybody can arrive to a point Yes there is some problem in the society need to be sort out.
We as professional workers having such kind of solution, initiated a forum to reveal answers against the problems which can be very genuine

Here the same society which has more education industries loots exorbitant money from our parents for the sake of our future, but the same society which after the degree have limited job to provide for the numbered peoples whom they can select in the process of illogical competitions, nobody can say this is right.
Every person has technical ideas as a part of the study. If somebody says this job can be performed by this person only means it is unscientific sixth sense.

If somebody says this is the only social architecture I would request them to review the history because the history says the replacement for this social design
The government which always works for the goodwill of the few peoples will not find the permanent solution for these problems because the real solution will question the existence of the government itself, so it always say and suggest the temporary unsuccessful that can make the people confused to see the root cause of these problems.

First thing to carry out
The government always support and work for the welfare of the industrialist in the name of democracy never mind the employee struggle to have penny more money as a salary for their useful needs. The social design is not controlled by the government instead it was controlled by the few numbered capitalist who have the entire hold in the economy of this social design so the state structure government always plays the second fiddle to these numbered capitalist.
The industrialist always tries to make and keep the problems in many ways such as
1. Breaking the direct hold between the industrialist and the labors in the name of contract every single thing done by the capitalist class have various meanings for example this contract workers means to 
a) earn surplus profit
b) Break the direct relation to fight against their own industrialist
c) Percolate the capitalist class idea to the working class by making planting the enemy within the workers.
2. since the demand for the employee is less every industrialist enjoying the cheap labor for their surplus profit, negating the amenities of the workers, unhindered and timeless work extraction. 
3. Intentionally breaking every small unity emerges with workers for the good cause and nullifying the scope of unity by offering cheap luxury.

Like this point there are many other points which will reveal the class interest of the greedy capitalist
What we need to do?
Like the way the organized capitalist class join hands and minds for the greedy misappropriate growth, we also join our hand and minds for the well being of the entire human race

Unity is the first slogan which we need to sound like a thunder in rains!!

Reasoning all the odd things happen to both workers and civilians with the joined hands so that we can come to know the inters and the intention of the ruling class
If there can’t be any solution for the problems in prevailing society plant the stone to built the new.

Workers of all country unite!!!