People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 04 January 26, 2014 |
Workers Agitate All Over
Haryana ON
January 12, 2014,
workers and helpers of the child rearing centres as well as
tailoring teachers
from all over Haryana staged a militant demonstration in
Rohtak city and sent a
memorandum to the chief minister, B S Hooda, about their
grievances. Under
the banner of the
Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), the demonstrators
assembled in the local Leaders
of the concerned union
like Somwati, Kaushalya, Rajkaur, Manoj, Reshma, Puja and
Balesh Sharma said
they had been working for the last 30 years or so, and their
working time is 9
a m to 5 p m but yet they are not treated like regular
employees. Can one look
after a family in such a small income, they asked. This low
wage too remains
unpaid for as much as eight months. There are 25 children in
one single creche,
and the daily allowance for them is just 52 rupees. The
question is: Can a
child be sustained in just Rs 2.05 a day? Teachers working
in the tailoring
centres have the same miserable plight. The
meeting decided that
all the workers would energetically take part in the padav to be organised at the deputy
commissioner offices in all
districts on January 29 and 30. The
protestors then took
out a procession to the Mini Secretariat, where a memorandum
was despatched to
the chief minister. It demanded, among other things, that
all the workers and
helpers must be declared to be Class III employees and given
the corresponding
salaries along with all the facilities. Till then, they must
be given the
minimum wage. If necessary, the child rearing centres must
be merged with the
Anganwadi centres and their workers and helpers must get the
honoraria
equivalent to what the Anganwadi workers and helpers are
getting. All the
workers and helpers must be given social security including
pension and
insurance. They must also be given maternity leave for six
months with full
pay, identity cards and two uniforms a year. A worker and a
helper must be
given Rs two lakh and Rs one lakh respectively at the time
of retirement. The
daily allowance for the creche children must be raised from
Rs 2.05 to at least
Rs 10 per head. The demonstrators also demanded
regularisation of the BGMS
crafts teachers and the maids looking after the creche
children. MID-DAY MEAL WORKERS AGITATE THE
mid-day meals workers
of Haryana staged protest demonstrations in front of the
district education
offices all over the state on January 10, 2014, to press for
implementation of
the increase announced in their wages and to get their
pending wages released.
The call was given by a state level convention of the
Mid-Day Meal Workers
Union, in which more than a hundred workers from various
districts had
participated. The
convention made the
categorical remark that the wage increase announced was no
largesse from the
government but a result of the workers’ struggles. It
demanded that the
government must implement its own announcement at the
earliest. The convention
had also reiterated the old demand that these workers must
be declared to be
permanent workers and given corresponding salaries, till
which time they must
get the minimum wage. But the government has not acceded to
this demand to this
day. While the Congress government of Haryana is taking the
workers to the
brink of starvation and destitution through its neo-liberal
policies, the
opposition BJP has been siding with the government on these
issues. That is why
the union leaders are very categorical that workers will
have to all the more
vigorously fight for alternative policies in the days to
come. As
per a decision of the
convention, mid-day meal workers staged vigorous
demonstrations in all the
districts of Haryana on January 21, the first day of the
three-day statewide
strike of all employees and workers on January 21-23.
Thousands of mid-day meal
workers joined these demonstrations on the day. The
union’s state
president Saroj Dujana and general secretary Jai Bhagwan
have pointed out that
mid-day meal workers in most of the districts of Haryana
have not been paid
their wage, which is a paltry Rs 1,150 a month in any case,
for six to nine
months. How these will workers survive, the union leaders
asked. District and
state level officials are not a bit serious about this
matter, despite a number
of protest actions. That is why the union has decided to
hold a padav at
the deputy commissioner’s
office in every district on January 29 and 30, on the issue
of job
regularisation, minimum wage, social security and paid
maternity leave for six
months. Another demand is that the workers who have been
removed from service
must be immediately reinstated.