People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 09 March 03, 2013 |
New
Crescendo of Indian Working Class Struggle
A
K Padmanabhan
THE
48 hours countrywide general strike on February
20 and 21 has been historic and also unprecedented on many
counts. With the
participation of about 12 crore workers, it has surpassed
the expectations of even
the central trade unions and national federations which had
called for the
action to protest against the unjust and anti-people
policies of the ruling
classes. Trade unions have from day one been resisting these
policies which are
being implemented from 1991, but the practical experience of
their disastrous
impact on the livelihoods of the working people in our
country made all the central
trade unions and national federations to come on a joint
platform on the basis
of an agreed charter of demands. As is now well known, this
charter included
issues related not only to workers but to all the toiling
people in the
country. Some of the policy issues raised are related to the
overall economic
policies implemented in the country. This led more and more
regional or state
level trade unions and also thousands of independent plant,
office or sectoral level
unions to join hands.
UNPRECEDENTED
PARTICIPATION
The
campaign undertaken all over the
country was unprecedented. The conventions, meetings and
rallies joined by top level
leaders of the unions, the handbills, booklets, posters and
wall writings etc
made a huge impact. The unity at the leadership level
percolated down to the
workplace level to a considerable extent and the united
campaigns created a
powerful impact upon workers. This resulted in a large
number of non-unionised
workers also joining the strike. Added to these were the new
additions of
unions on the second day, which was the result of the sweep
of strike on the
first day.
The
strike encompassed almost all sectors –
organized, unorganized, public sector and private sector.
The only exception as
a sector was the railways. Even, the functioning of Airports
in many states had
been affected with a section of the huge number of contract
workers joining
their brethren working elsewhere.
Employees
in the banks, insurance and other
financial sector institutions, oil and petroleum units, road
transport (both
public and private), in postal, telecom, defence production
and other sectors, in
ports and docks, coal mines, steel plants, electricity
boards and in central power
utilities like NTPC and also atomic power stations joined in
this huge action
of the working people.
Private
and public sector manufacturing
units including units of the multinationals (MNCs) even in
the special economic
zones, saw the regular as well as contract workers joining
the strike. Among
the MNCs and private manufacturing units, many witnessed
participation in a
general strike or even a strike for the first time. Notable
was the entire
industrial belt of Gurgaon joining the strike on second day.
Workers from 70
industrial units, producing mainly automobiles and
components, like Maruti,
Hero, Honda and Ricco, joined the action. More than a lakh
was the
participation in this belt. Some employers, sensing the mood
of workers,
declared a holiday on February 21 to pre-empt a strike being
recorded. Central
and state government employees, university, college and
school teachers
participated in large numbers, despite the threat of serious
repercussions in
some states.
Unorganised
sector workers in all the states
participated en masse in the struggle. So also was the
participation of
militant women workers under various schemes of the
government, like the Anganwadi,
ASHA, mid-day meal workers and others. The participation of
schemes workers and
also other rural based workers helped to take the struggle
down to remote
villages.
The
campaigns and the resultant support
among the people and traders resulted in bandhs in various
states like Bihar,
Millions
of workers, peasants, agricultural
workers and others participated in demonstrations, rallies,
rasta rokos and rail rokos in various centres across the
country.
As
the call of the strike reached down to
various urban and rural centres in all the states, these
rallies and
demonstrations had had a wider impact upon the common
masses.
GOVT
FEELS
THE
HEAT
As
the country approached the dates of the
strike, the government too could not but feel its impact.
Though this was the
15th countrywide general strike since 1991, there was never
an intervention at the
ministerial level. Union labour minister, Mallikarjun
Kharge, invited all the
central trade unions for a discussion on February 13, just
one week before the
strike. But he only told the leaders that some initiatives
on labour law
amendments, minimum pension in EPF etc were pending with
other ministries and the
PMO and that he would discuss the proceedings of the meeting
with the prime
minister later that evening. Naturally, the meeting
concluded with the trade
unions declaring that “What we want is a settlement and the
government should
come forward to deliver.”
On
the 17th night, the prime minister
issued a press statement calling upon the trade unions to
drop the action and
announced a four member group of senior cabinet members
under defence minister,
A K Antony, to hold discussions. The fact that the prime
minister communicated with
the central trade unions only through a press statement is
notable; one wonders
if this would have been his attitude in case of corporate
houses or MNCs. The
meeting at 8 p m on February 18, just 28 hours before the
strike was to begin,
also failed as the government had nothing more to say than
what it said on the 13th.
The defence minister agreed that the meeting was a delayed
one but wanted the trade
unions to have faith in the government to solve the issues
and asked them to drop
the strike action.
These
discussions helped again to point out
how callous the government was on the issues facing the
workers, and had not
been serious about many decisions of the Indian Labour
Conferences in the last
few years.
There
were also threats of severe action
being if workers joined the strike. The State Bank of
This
largest and longest ever united action
of working class in
LOUD
MESSAGE
TO
GOVT OF
All
this, however, does not mean that
everything went on as it should have been. There were
weaknesses and failures
also. Some of the unions, which should have participated in
this historic
action, failed and many of these were not failures of
workers but of the
leaders. In some cases, leaders betrayed the movement at the
last moment. One
such case was the leadership of the Mumbai transport workers
who, in the name
of a cabinet sub-committee being formed (!?), withdrew the
strike on the 19th night.
The
sweep of this historic struggle was
noted by the international working class movement.
International trade union
organisations like the WFTU, ITUC and central trade unions
in countries like
George
Mavrikos, general secretary of the WFTU,
in a message to the CITU said: “The successful two-day
strike has been an
important lesson for the international working class and a
loud message to the
Indian government.”
While
addressing the media in the evening
hours on the second day, central trade union leaders
referred to this “loud
message” to the government of
Notwithstanding
the offensive coming from the
authorities, ruling classes, employers’ organisations and a
big section of
media, against the struggle of our working people, a message
has well gone far
and wide.
United
on the basis of a charter of
immediate demands, the working people have successfully
cautioned the government
that the present set of policies, based on neo-liberal
diktats, cannot be
allowed to continue. It is a united voice for change in
policies. Our endeavour
will be to further strengthen this unity, build up a massive
popular movement and
safeguard the interests of the huge majority of Indians.
This is the goalpost towards
which the working class will march in the coming days.