People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 46 November 17, 2013 |
JIND,
HARYANA
CITU,
AIAWY Rally Challenges Govt Policies
ON
November 9, 2013, the HUDA ground in
Jind, Haryana, saw the convergence of a large number of people
in the Mazdoor Lalkar
Rally, on the call given jointly by Haryana state committees
of the Centre of
Indian Trade Unions (CITU) and All India Agricultural Workers
Union (AIAWU).
They had come here to challenge the anti-people policies of
the Congress
government in the state and the Congress led UPA government at
the central.
They also challenged the main opposition parties of Haryana
who are busy
holding rallies and yatras
continuously but are keeping mum on the basic issues faced by
the toiling
masses of Haryana.
At
the rally, speakers charged all parties
of the ruling bourgeois-landlord classes of ignoring the
workers’ plight, which
characteristically exposes their innate anti-worker attitude.
During the
Bhupinder Singh Hooda’s regime, his relatives, his near and
dear ones,
capitalists and contractors are earning super profits by
wringing the workers
and common people of the state. The rallyists said workers are
the real makers
of the present day Haryana, and as such they deserve not
crumbs but their due share
in the wealth being created.
The
huge presence of the workers in the
rally was a testimony of their anger and anguish against the
anti-people
policies of the state and central governments. This was the
first time in the
history of Haryana that workers had mobilised in such a big
number, which showed
that the working class had awakened and was challenging the
anti-people
policies of the governments. It is clear that they would not
stop until present
day policies are given up in favour of pro-people policies.
Addressing
the thousands of the
participants who had come from every nook and corner of the
state, CITU general
secretary and member of parliament, Tapan Sen, said that the
governments have
been drastically reducing the subsidies being given to the
poor people whereas
the rich capitalists and other affluent sections have been
given rebates to the
tune of Rs ten lakh crore in the last two years. Two years
have elapsed since
an understanding on the revision of minimum wages was reached
in the Indian labour
conference. They asked the state government why it is not
willing to revise the
minimum wages which at today’s costs works out to be more than
Rs 15,000. Today,
Haryana is known throughout the world for its unprecedented
repression of
workers and for unbridled loot by capitalists. During the
Hooda government’s
regime, Honda,
AIAWU
joint secretary and former MP, Hannan
Mollah, said there are 20 crore agricultural workers in the
country but there
is no statute for them. The government’s own survey reveals
that these workers
get employment only for 57 days in a year. How can one survive
under such
inflationary conditions, he asked. The MGNREGA was passed
after a long struggle
but these workers get employment for only 34 days against the
provision of 100
days. The scheme’s budget is often siphoned off by the
governments and the
vested interests. The Hooda government of Haryana is working
like a property
dealer which is acquiring the farmers’ lands at throwaway
prices and handing them
over to the capitalists. There is no provision of relief s for
agricultural
workers in the recent land acquisition act.
CITU
secretary Dr K Hemlatha said that a large
section of women is compelled to work in the unorganised
sector where there is
no social security at all. Workers of the Anganwadi, ASHA,
mid-day meal scheme
etc are being paid only nominal honoraria and meagre
incentives on the plea
that these are only schemes. This has become a new way of
exploitation of women
labour. The speaker demanded that the state government should
declare them
government employees and, till this declaration, pay them the
statutory minimum
wages. She also demanded that all working women must get the
benefit of six
months paid leave on maternity.
CITU
state president Surender Singh and general
secretary Satvir Singh said that in spite of having an act
passed by the
central government in 2008, the state government has not even
bothered to
constitute a welfare board for the workers of the unorganised
sector. They said
even the registration of workers under the Constructions
Workers Welfare Board
is not being done and thus these workers are not able to avail
of any benefits.
Brick kiln workers too are not being covered by this board.
They asked why the
government was not declaring the casual, contract, part time,
outsourced
workers and scheme workers as regular employees.
Ram
Kumar Behbalpuria and Ram Avtar,
president and general secretary respectively of the Khet
Mazdoor Union of Haryana
(an AIAWU affiliate) said the Hooda government was working
hard even to reverse
the constitutional provisions. By changing the provisions of
the land ceiling
act, the government has nullified the land reforms act. They
have changed the sizes,
numbers and nature of landholdings. The central and state
governments have
become the largest hoarders. Foodgrains are rotting in the
open while the poor
are sleeping empty stomach. Dalits and other poor are
increasingly being
attacked and the government and its administration are
generally seen siding
with the culprits.
CPI(M)
state secretary Inderjit Singh said his
party has always been fighting for the poor toiling masses.
The bourgeois
parties do not even support the poor’s cause. The government
was trying all
tricks to entice the gullible masses for the Gohana rally that
was to take
place a day later. However, the real force lay in this Jind
rally where the
people had come at their own expenses to fight for their
demands.
SKS
state president Dharamvir Phogat, CITU
leaders Ramesh Chander, Sukhbir and Surekha, kisan leader
Phool Singh Sheokand
and khet mazdoor leader Prakash Chander also addressed the
rally.
Through
a resolution, the rally supported
the strike call of state government employees on November 13
and roadways
employees’ strike of November 14, and decided to hold block
level
demonstrations in their support. If the government did not act
upon the 20
point demands charter sent to the chief minister, the CITU and
the AIAWU would organise
a 72 hours dharna at the district commissioners’ offices in
January next year.