People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 31 July 31, 2005 |
THE
television images of the savagery exhibited by the Haryana Police in their
attack on the workers of Japanese multinational company – Honda Motorcycles
and Scooters India Pvt Ltd (HMSI) – brought to many minds the Jallianwala Bagh
massacre perpetrated by the British rulers during the freedom movement. Only in
one aspect were the two incidents different. The army under British rule fired
upon the people, killing hundreds of them, while the police under the Congress
government of Haryana rained lathis on the people, breaking their heads and
limbs. Otherwise, the modus operandi has been similar – launching a savage attack on
unarmed, peacefully gathered people after trapping them in a fixed area and
closing all escape routes. In Gurgaon, hundreds of workers and their leaders
were thrown into jail after being attacked and, on top of it, slapped with cases
ranging from attempt to murder to rioting --- under sections 307, 148, 149 etc.
If
General Dyer’s army embarked on its savagery in the interests of their British
masters, the Haryana Police launched their brutal attack on the workers in the
interests of Japanese MNC masters. It appears the Honda company has bought over
the entire Gurgaon district administration who, in their over-eagerness to
please their paymasters, launched such a savage, pre-meditated attack on the
workers which sent shockwaves across the country. Here one has a glimpse of the
savagery in the words of one of the victims, Dalveer: “After we were
mercilessly beaten up, the police bundled us into vans and took us to the police
station. There they asked each of us to show our wounds and when we did, they
again beat on the same spots, shouting abuses. After detaining us for hours
together, they took us to the civil hospital. Since yesterday not a single
doctor or anyone has attended on us.”
CPI(M) LEADERS VISIT GURGAON
CPI(M)
Polit Bureau member Brinda Karat, CPI(M) leader in Rajya Sabha, Nilotpal Basu
and CPI(M) Haryana state secretary Inderjit Singh, who visited the Gurgaon civil
hospital on the morning of July 26 to meet the victims, were shocked to hear
this. When the Superintendent of Police, Yogendra Nehra was pointedly questioned
by the CPI(M) leaders, he hesitantly confessed that the injured were indeed
first taken to the police stations. The CPI(M) leaders blasted the police
officials saying that even in wars, the injured enemy troops are given first-aid
and treatment while the workers in this case were treated much worse. The
hostile attitude of the police – again deployed in huge numbers at the civil
hospital on July 26 – was clearly evident. In fact, they were provoking the
anxious relatives and friends of the injured workers when they had gathered in
large numbers. A woman, whose injured brother was admitted in the hospital on
the night of July 25 and later whisked away by the police, was abused by a high
ranking police officer in obscene language when she sought to know her
brother’s whereabouts. The already seething crowd of relatives burst out in
anger, leading to minor scuffle with the police. Brinda Karat took the woman
into the room of the hospital’s chief medical officer where the Inspector
General of Gurgaon range, the district SP and other officials were present and
raised the matter. The IG, Deepa Mehta, assured the CPI(M) leaders and the woman
that she would take action against the guilty police officers.
The
CPI(M) leaders demanded of the hospital authorities and police officers to
provide them with the list of those admitted in the hospital and those arrested
and lodged in police stations. Many injured workers and their relatives alleged
that around 500 injured were brought to the hospital on the night of July 25 but
many were later taken away to undisclosed places by the police. The list that
was provided by the hospital CMO showed only 39 workers as being admitted while
the police gave a list of 61 persons arrested. What happened to the rest was the
main question troubling the relatives. Clearly, the administration did not want
their savagery to be further exposed and therefore bundled the victims out. And
those remaining in the hospital were just ignored by the doctors and staff. No
treatment was provided in fact. An injured worker who had three fractures was
sharing his cot with another injured worker! This was the state of affairs.
Even
as the CPI(M) leaders left the hospital to meet the commissioner, the police
once again let loose their terror on those gathered in the hospital premises.
This time they used tear gas and lathis --- again, liberally. They did not spare
the media persons too, many of whom received lathi blows. Deshabhimani
Delhi correspondent Sajith was also injured in this attack. The CPI(M)
leaders, on hearing the news, rushed back from their meeting to the hospital and
strongly condemned the police brutality. They addressed the workers and their
relatives, and called for a sustained struggle to prevent the government from
acting as a stooge of multinational companies. They demanded immediate
suspension of the Deputy Commissioner, the SP and transfer of IG Gurgaon range
to restore the confidence of the people in whatever inquiry is to take place.
The CPI(M) leaders also demanded immediate provision of treatment and
compensation to all those injured in the attack and prosecution of Honda company
officials for their blatant violation of labour laws. They wanted immediate
release of all workers arrested by the police and lifting of cases booked
against them. There were further visits by the CPI(M) leaders. Three MPs of the
Party, Amitav Nandy, Santashree Chatterjee and Laxman Seth visited the hospital
on July 27 and took stock of the treatment being provided to the injured
workers.
The
strong reaction from the Left parties, trade unions, media and the people in
general forced the insensitive Hooda government to order a judicial inquiry in
place of its earlier decision of going in for a magisterial inquiry. He was
summoned to Delhi by the prime minister in view of growing protests. The Left
parties, after staging a walkout from both houses of parliament, raised this
issue with the prime minister during their meeting on July 26. They made it
clear that the officers must first be shifted before the inquiry begins, in
order to instill confidence among the people. Earlier, at the call of the Delhi
unit of CPI(M), a militant demonstration was organised in front of Haryana
Bhawan in Delhi. Giving vent to their outrage, the demonstrators tried to crash
through the barricades into Haryana Bhawan. The police resorted to use of water
cannon to prevent this. The CPI(M) Polit Bureau and CITU have called for
nationwide actions to protest this barbarity of the Haryana Police.
What
exactly happened on July 25? To know this, one has to go into what the Honda
workers’ struggle has been all about. Honda is not new to India. Its joint
venture with Indian company Hero – Hero Honda – was a ubiquitous name, as
far as motorcycles were concerned, for more than a decade. However, it decided
to launch a fully-owned company in India to benefit fully in the globalised
times. Thus was launched the HMSI Pvt Ltd with its manufacturing facility at
Manesar in Gurgaon district, which employed more than 3500 workers, both regular
and trainees. It has now come to light that the company has been blatantly
violating all labour laws and its officials often resorted to harassment of
workers. Leeladhar of Sutrali Gaon, who has been working in the company since
the last three years, told People’s Democracy about the sort of harassment meted out. A
Japanese official of the company tried to barge into ladies toilet and, though
prevented and warned by the workers, he kept repeating this repulsive practice.
Unable to bear this, the workers gave him a thrashing. However, instead of
pulling up the concerned official, the management summarily dismissed four
employees and resorted to various other forms of harassment. One Sikh worker was
asked to remove his turban during work hours; fixed timings were prescribed for
going to toilets; if there is a break in attendance in a month, an amount of 350
rupees is cut from the employee’s salary; the company’s share of PF
contribution was also being cut from workers’ salary etc. As the workers
organised themselves by forming a union to fight this injustice – which they
are perfectly entitled to as per existing labour laws – the company hit back
by dismissing 40 workers. And as the struggle went on and larger demands of wage
increase were also taken up, a total of 1700 employees were sacked by the
company just like that. The company wanted to retrench workers and saw this as
an opportunity. It was the obnoxious ‘hire and fire’ policy in real action.
It is in this background that the workers of HMSI waged a struggle against Honda company’s strong-arm methods. They had support of major trade unions and Left parties. CPI(M) leader in Lok Sabha, Basudev Acharia wrote a letter to prime minister seeking his intervention to restore the jobs of dismissed workers. CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta also took up the issue with the prime minister. However, the state government, more particularly the Gurgaon district administration, were acting as agents of Honda management. Although the company agreed to take back workers in batches of a few hundreds each, it was firm that it will not reinstate the 40 employees who were dismissed in the first place and in whose defence the workers had taken to the struggle path. This resulted in stalemate.
A
joint meeting of trade unions held in Gurgaon decided to hold protest actions on
July 25 at all district headquarters in Haryana to press their demand that all
dismissed Honda workers should be reinstated. It was as part of this call that
the workers took out the rally on July 25 from Manesar to Gurgaon. They were
marching peacefully along this stretch and were to submit a memorandum to the
DC.
The
procession was stopped when it reached the Gurgaon industrial area. The police
ordered the workers to return. CITU leader Raj Singh and AITUC leader Subhash
Diwan engaged the police in a discussion to let the procession move forward. But
the procession was again stopped a few metres away from the building housing the
office of Industrial Association. The local industrial lobby, including the
Honda company did not like this display of strength by workers. And it is now
clear that they, in a planned manner, pressed into service hired goons to
disrupt the procession. All of a sudden, masked men – as was evident in the
television images – resorted to torching police vehicles and throwing stones.
The fact that the police, despite being present in strength, did not make any
effort to nab these persons shows the conspiracy and collusion.
After
this disruption, the workers were informed by the police that the administration
and the HMSI management would hold talks with them at the mini secretariat. They
were asked to assemble there. Even as hundreds of workers reached the mini
secretariat and were peacefully waiting for the DC to turn up for the talks, the
administration in a pre-planned manner let loose hordes of policemen on them.
The savage attack that followed, captured vividly by television cameras, has
shocked the entire nation. Along with hundreds of workers, CITU leader Raj
Singh, AITUC leader Subhash Diwan and HMSI Workers Union general secretary
Suresh Gaur were also injured. After this savagery, the police took the workers
and their leaders to the police stations and clamped serious cases against them.
The fate of many injured workers remained unknown by the time of writing these
lines. The police whisked them away from the hospitals.
While
much of the focus in this entire issue has naturally been on the savagery of the
police and the insensitivity of the Haryana administration, one cannot lose
sight of the genesis of the problem – the recolonising process of
globalisation being enthusiastically ushered in by our ruling classes. The
mindless obsession with FDI is emboldening the foreign companies to blatantly
disregard our labour laws. One can well imagine the status of affairs if the
so-called “labour law reforms” are carried out. It will be a regime of
“Hire & Fire” and “Bullet for Protest” all over.
But,
then, Gurgaon gives hope as well. The militant manner in which the workers
braved the lathis and the unflinching eagerness to continue their just struggle;
the involvement of the workers’ families in fighting for justice; and more
importantly, the countrywide reaction this savagery has generated are a case in
point.