People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 50 December 12, 2004 |
CITU
WORKING COMMITTEE CALL
Strengthen Working Class Unity;
Bring Masses into Struggles
Hemalata
THE
working committee of the CITU called upon the working class to intensify the
struggles against the attacks on the living and working conditions of the
toiling masses in the country. Noting the complicated political situation in the
country, the report adopted by the working committee observed ‘The present
political reality is that the communal and divisive forces that have been ousted
from power at the centre are eagerly waiting in the wings, greedily looking for
the earliest opportunity to stage a come back. The working class keenly desires
that the UPA government should take measures, which would frustrate these
attempts. But, the working class and the trade union movement cannot remain
silent onlookers to such actions of the government, which negate the people’s
verdict and cause serious discontent among them. Under these circumstances,
resistance to the anti-people and anti-worker measures of the UPA government,
which are more in tune with the retrograde policies of economic liberalisation
has to mature from protest actions to more and more strong, united and sustained
struggles of the working class.’
The
working committee met at Rabindra Bhawan in Agartala, the capital city of
Tripura on December 3-5, 2004. This was the first time that an all India meeting
of CITU was held in the landlocked North Eastern state which has been long
neglected by the successive governments at the centre. Around 100 members of the
working committee from all over the country participated in the meeting, which
looked at the international and national situation from the working class view
point, discussed the implementation of the decisions of the Nasik general
council held in July 2004, and formulated the future activities.
The
meeting began at 10.00 am on December 3, with the hoisting of the Red Flag of
CITU by its president, M K Pandhe, and paying floral homage to the martyrs who
laid down their lives in the struggle to protect the interests of the toiling
masses. This was followed by the inaugural session in which the chairman of the
reception committee, Khagen Das, MP, welcomed the delegates. He informed the
working committee members that with its rich natural resources like gas, rubber,
tea, pine apple etc Tripura had immense potential for development, but these
could not be tapped due to the lack of infrastructure, which has been neglected
by the Government of India. He pointed out that the root cause of insurgency in
the state was unemployment and poverty, which was being utilised by the
anti-national elements. The Left Front, which has been ruling the state for
twenty one years, in two spells, has been trying its best to improve the living
conditions of the people and has been successful in protecting the unity of the
tribal and non-tribal population of the state. There has been significant
improvement in the social indicators in the state, like literacy, education and
health during the tenure of the Left Front government.
UNSUSTAINABLE
M K Pandhe delivered the presidential address which dealt at length on the international situation. He referred to the increasing aggressiveness of American imperialism, particularly after the re-election of Bush for the second term as president. Pandhe noted that the recent developments in world economy showed some signs of partial recovery of capitalism, but the economy in the developed countries was slower than the world average. The spectacular rate of growth of the Chinese economy significantly contributed to the higher rate of growth of the world economy as a whole and that of the developing countries. He observed that the international trade under the regime of globalisation has not helped the developing countries anywhere in the world, which was evident even from the data trotted out by the World Bank. The number of poor in the world has gone up. While 25 years ago 500 million people in the world were starving, the figure has swelled to 800 million today. Around 325 million children in the world have no chance of going to school and most of them are forced to work. As per the WHO figures, 33,000 children die everyday in developing countries due to curable diseases, while the prices of essential medicines are hiked by the profit-hungry pharmaceutical MNCs.
Quoting
the message of Fidel Castro to the UNCTAD conference, Pandhe concluded, ‘The
imperialist system that prevails today, towards which the developed capitalist
society unavoidably evolved, has already come to such a ruthlessly irrational
and unfair world economic and neo-liberal order that it is unsustainable. Many
people will rebel against it. In fact, they have already begun to rebel. For the
first time in the history, man has created the technical capacity for its own
destruction. However, it has not been capable of creating a minimum guarantee
for the safety and integrity of every country on equal footing… The people
will become ungovernable, and no repression, torture, disappearances or massive
murders will stop them. Not only will the hungry of the Third World be in the
struggle for their own survival and that of their children, but also the
conscious people from the rich world, both manual and intellectual workers.’
Shyamal
Chakravarty, secretary of CITU introduced a resolution congratulating the
working class and the people of Tripura for preserving the unity of the tribal
and non-tribal people in the state and for their role in the struggle against
the anti-worker policies of the central government. The resolution also greeted
the Left Front government of Tripura, which was doing a commendable job to
uplift the living conditions of the people in the state while resisting the
pressure from the successive governments at the centre to implement the
anti-people policies of globalisation. K N Ravindranath seconded the resolution.
The meeting also unanimously passed a resolution introduced by E Balanandan,
vice president of CITU and supported by Habeeb, secretary, demanding that the
Electricity Bill 2003 should be reviewed and the harmful clauses withdrawn.
NEGATIVE
SWING
Chittabrata
Majumdar presented the general secretary’s report, which outlined the national
situation under the UPA rule. He explained that the CMP formulated by the UPA
government maintained the main paradigm of the economic policies pursued since
1991, but had to incorporate some positive pro-peasant, pro-worker and pro-poor
promises due to the pressure from the Left forces. At the same time, the
government was trying to implement the Fund-Bank dictated policies of
liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation through the back door, by
utilising some cleverly worded assertions in the CMP. While there was no
initiative to implement the pro-people promises, the government was all too keen
to oblige the national and multinational corporations. The recent decisions of
the government to hike the FDI cap in civil aviation from 40 to 49 per cent, its
repeated assertions to privatise the lucrative Delhi and Mumbai airports, the
non-serious attitude in formulating the revival plans for the sick PSUs, the
decision of the Group of Ministers to sell the equities in the profitable PSUs
through IPO etc were all indications of the negative swing in the policies.
The
report made it clear that what has changed with the change in regime at the
centre was that the CMP has only given some space for the trade union movement
to move forward and intensify the struggle. The general secretary’s report
warned that the working class has to be vigilant and alert towards the policies
of the government and should mobilise the workers and other sections of the
society to bring pressure on the government at least to implement the pro-worker
and pro-people promises made in the CMP. The struggle against ‘religious
fundamentalism’ and ‘market fanaticism’ should be fought with equal vigour.
The trade union movement must prepare itself for a long drawn united struggle
and there should not be any illusion that the advocates of the so-called
‘economic reforms’ will lose their zeal because the government has to depend
on the support of the Left Parties in the parliament.
A
total of 29 members participated in the discussion on the general secretary’s
report, after which it was unanimously adopted. While supporting the report they
strengthened it by narrating their own experiences in the states. Member after
member reported about the increasing repression and police intervention in the
struggles of the working class to protect their existing rights. The incidences
in Visakhapatnam Port Trust, in the New Allen Berry Factory in Faridabad, in the
glass bangle industry in Ferozabad in Uttar Pradesh were only a few examples. In
Banihal in Jammu and Kashmir, where the construction workers in the Udhampur –
Baramulla Railway Project were on strike since the last four months, the Army
was deployed at the instance of the contractor, to terrorise the workers. In
many states, unions were not even being registered under the Trade Unions Act.
Workers and their leaders were being victimised in a big way for joining unions.
Workers had to launch prolonged struggles even for the implementation of such
basic rights like 8 hours work, attendance register, appointment letter, minimum
wages and the right to form unions.
The
working committee noted with grave concern the increasing contractorisation and
casualisation of the work place and observed that neglecting the most important
task of organising the contract workers would be suicidal for the entire trade
union movement. The regular workers’ unions must take the responsibility of
organising the contract workers. It emphasised that drawing appropriate
strategy, both at the work place as well as at the national level, was necessary
to voice forcefully the demands of the contract workers. It was decided to hold
conventions at the all India, state and industry level to bring the problems of
the contract workers into focus. The working committee also decided to undertake
a deeper study of the Information Technology (IT) and Information Technology
Enabled Services (ITES) and adopt an appropriate strategy to organise the
workers in this sector, which has started playing a crucial role in the
country’s economy.
The
working committee criticised the Draft Bill for the Unorganised Sector workers
of the UPA government, which envisaged social security for the unorganised
sector workers based on their contributions with just a token contribution from
the central government. The bill seeks to impose a heavy burden on the state
governments, which raises doubts on whether the bill can ever take off in its
present form. Similarly the bill on Rural Employment Guarantee also suffers from
many anomalies. The CITU working committee called upon all the CITU units to
undertake a vigorous campaign among the workers at the grass root level and make
efforts to develop a countrywide movement focusing the demands of CITU on these
issues.
The
working committee also endorsed the recommendations of the national workshop of
the All India Coordination Committee of Working Women (AICCWW) held on November
18-19, which included continuing the signature campaign and submission of
memoranda to the governors in all states on 8th March 2005; making serious
efforts to organise the home-based workers, domestic workers and fishers and
fisheries workers, develop an all India movement of nurses and collect all the
available data on the participation of working women in the trade union movement
in the last 25 years. It was noted that the mobilisation in the convention and
the rally reflected the functioning of the state-level coordination committees
of working women as well as the attention paid by the CITU state committees to
the work among working women.
The
CITU working committee noted that the rising unemployment is of serious concern
not only to the working class but also the millions of youth who were entering
the job market every year. Even internationally, as a result of the ‘jobless
growth’ due to the globalisation policies, unemployment was increasing and the
issue was becoming a focal point in the political developments also. Hence, it
was imperative on the part of the CITU to take up the issue with due seriousness
and it was decided to start the efforts by organising a two day workshop in
March – May, 2005.
Emphasising
the importance of united struggles the working committee observed that unless
the unity of the working class is strengthened, the task of bringing broader
masses, besides the working class, into struggles cannot be effective. This
envisages streng-thening the CITU, expanding its independent activities and
taking a dominant role in building struggles which would help the working class
and the trade unions to overcome vacillations and join the struggles in order to
strengthen them in proper directions.
Manik
Sarkar, chief minister of Tripura greeted the working committee on the evening
of December 4. He mentioned about the frontline role of CITU and the working
class movement in Tripura in combating the onslaughts of the extremist forces
while carrying on united struggle against the neo-liberal policies and in
defence of the democratic rights. The role of the working class movement and the
CITU in particular had always been crucial in shaping and elevating the
democratic movement in the state to its present height, asserted Manik Sarkar.
Several cultural troupes in the state presented brilliant performances,
including tribal songs and dances. All the working committee members who
attended the meeting gained first hand knowledge on the difficult conditions in
which the activists of the CITU and other mass organisations were working and
were inspired by their hard work. The last day witnessed a massive rally of
workers in the Astabal Maidan, who marched in small streams from different
corners of the city to converge to the venue. The public meeting was addressed
by Manik Sarkar, M K Pandhe, Chittabrata Majumdar and Pijush Nag, general
secretary of the Tripura state committee of CITU.