People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
29 July 18, 2010 |
Massive
All
K
Hemalata
JULY
9, 2010 once again witnessed the anger and resentment of the anganwadi
employees towards the UPA II government. After waiting for more than
two months
for concrete action by the government on the assurances given by the
prime minister
on their demands, more than ten lakh anganwadi employees closed their
centres
and participated in a massive all
The
response of the anganwadi employees to the call for strike was
unprecedented. It
was massive and near total in many states including
UNDETERRED
PARTICIPATION
In
Andhra Pradesh, the strike was total with anganwadi employees in all
the
projects joining the strike despite the attempts by the child
development
project officers and the supervisors who went around the centres in
vehicles
threatening the anganwadi employees against participating in the
strike. The
government wanted to disrupt the strike by asking the accredited social
health
activists (ASHAs) and Indira Kranti Pathakam (IKP – a state government
programme) animators to run the anganwadi centres on the day. A few
days
earlier, the director of women development and child welfare directed
all the
supervisors to provide lists of the anganwadi workers and helpers ‘who
were
creating problems and trouble’ in the functioning of the anganwadi
centres, in
a bid to target the union activists for victimisation. But none of
these
attempts by the state government could deter the anganwadi employees
from
participating in the strike. More than one lakh anganwadi employees
participated in the project level dharna, processions, rallies; in many
projects, rasta rokos were held. Police resorted to arrests in
Vizianagaram and
In
Assam, strike was total in 22 out of the 27 districts in the state;
anganwadi
employees in 167 projects out of the total 228 projects in the state
participated in the strike; district level mobilisations were held in
16
districts while in one district, project level demonstrations were
held; around
17,000 anganwadi employees participated in processions and submitted
memoranda
addressed to the prime minister, to the deputy commissioners; for the
first
time anganwadi employees in Shivsagar district in the Brahmaputra
valley and Cachar
Hailakandi in Borak valley participated in the strike.
In
Chattisgarh, except Kabirdham district, strike was total in all the 19
other
districts. In addition to the district level rallies and
demonstrations, a
massive rally in which more than 2500 anganwadi employees participated,
was
held in the state capital, Raipur; around 800 – 900 anganwadi employees
participated in the rally in Rajnandgaon and burnt the effigy of the
prime minister.
Despite rain, anganwadi employees in large numbers participated in the
demonstrations and blocked the roads for several hours in many places.
Around
15,000 anganwadi employees in the districts of Dantewada, Jagadalpur,
Bijapur,
Narayangarh, Kanker, Sarguja, Korba and Jashpur participated in the
strike and
demonstrations.
The
strike was total in
Uttar
Pradesh is another state where the strike was unprecedented. It was
total in
the eastern and western parts of the state; 70- 80 per cent in
Bundelkhand and
southern parts; and partial in the central part. Demonstrations,
dharna, and burning of
effigies were held in several project and district headquarters
including
HUGE
RESPONSE
More
than 80 per cent of the anganwadi employees in Karnataka participated
in the
strike; huge demonstrations were held in almost all the districts and
in the
state capital Bengaluru. In Punjab, strike was observed in all the 20
districts
in the state and was total in several districts; rasta and rail roko,
dharna,
demonstrations, processions, burning of effigies etc were held in all
the
districts in which more than 10,000 participated; police resorted to
force in
Sangrur where Usha Rani, president of the union and secretary of the
AIFAWH was
injured along with several other anganwadi employees.
In
Haryana, strike was observed in 18 out of the 21 districts in the
state; in
Gurgaon, Bhiwani, Panipat, Hisar, Sirsa, Faridabad, Karnal, Palwal, and
Mewat,
anganwadi employees organised processions and rasta rokos; in some
places
anganwadi employees carried the effigy of the prime minister on their
shoulders
and marched before burning it. In Panipat, the traffic on the national
highway
was blocked for around one hour; despite the floods, demonstrations and
rasta
rokos were held in Kaithal and Yamuna Nagar.
Strike
was observed in 23 districts of Madhya Pradesh and demonstrations were
held in
17 districts; in six districts rasta rokos was held; effigies were
burnt in
several places; memoranda addressed to the prime minister were
submitted to the
district collectors in all the districts; in several districts
including
Jabalpur and Bhopal, the officers resorted to threats and brought
tremendous
pressure on the anganwadi employees to disrupt the strike; despite
this,
anganwadi employees participated in large numbers; in Jabalpur,
anganwadi
employees marched for a distance of two kilometers in a huge
procession.
The
strike was total in the districts of Dehra Dun, Pauri Garhwal, Chamoli
and
Uddhamsingh Nagar in Uttarakhand and partial in Tehri, Garhwal, Almora
and
Haridwar; anganwadi employees who were not members of AIFAWH also
participated
in the strike in several districts; rasta roko was held in Pauri
Garhwal;
project level demonstrations were held in Chamoli; district level
demonstrations were held in other districts; memoranda addressed to the
prime minister
were submitted to the district authorities.
More
than 1000 anganwadi employees in
Though
strike was not observed in Himachal Pradesh, as the anganwadi employees
went on
strike only a few days before on their pressing state level demands,
demonstrations were held at the district level in which hundreds of
anganwadi
employees participated. In Tamilnadu more than 7000 anganwadi employees
gathered in Chennai and started an indefinite sit-in near the
The
AIFAWH congratulated all the anganwadi employees, the state committees
and the
activists of the Federation for making the strike an unprecedented
success with
the massive participation in the demonstrations. It has demanded the
government
to take immediate steps to fulfil the assurances given by the prime
minister
and warned that the struggle would be further intensified if the
government
continues to neglect the demands.