[Reader-list] Do the workers vanish into the blue?

nagarik mancha nagarikmancha at gmail.com
Sat Apr 2 12:38:33 IST 2005


Do the workers vanish into the blue?

When a factory is locked out, the workers agitate. Soon the Government
apparatus swings into action. A police picket appears in the vicinity.
Maintenance of law and order seems to be the top priority. Weeks merge
into months and by then the threat to law and order presumably
subsides. Less and less of workers gather in front of the padlocked
factory gates till only a handful are left behind. Things are back to
'normal'.

Indeed the workers do not vanish into the blue. They factually cease
to remain en-bloc and disperse into the 'inter-cellular' spaces of our
society. The skilled and the experienced workers struggling away as a
vendor or tea stall help or head loader or one of the many
un-organised activities earning a pittance for a living. You can meet
hundreds of these Rams and Rahims and the overall picture almost
always remains the same.

However the workers DO vanish into the blue as far as the civil
society memory is concerned. Whether we like it or not, one can
smoothly wish away the very existence of these workers once they
disperse in search of their daily bread. And in most cases it is one
less pain in the neck to bear.

To study the plight of the workers in the locked out factories for
preparing a research oriented presentation is indeed important. Yet
weeks of interaction with these 'citizens' at different locations
revealed that a study concerning them could very well proceed in
tandem with mobilising support for them from the various strata of the
civil society. It was indeed deemed important that these
'disassociated individuals' within the civil society could very well
do with a lot of solidarity activity and lobbying in their favour. A
fraternally placed support group drawing participation from the
various sections of the civil society seemed to be the need of the
hour.

On 5th March 2005, a well attended Citizen's Convention  was held at
College Street, Kolkata after a month-and-a-half long campaign which
was kick-started at a Press Conference held on 20 January, 2005 at the
Press Club at Kolkata. During the intervening phase, ten thousand
leaflets were distributed, a thousand posters were hung up, scores of
news items appeared in the print and electronic media and dozens of
participatory meetings with workers were organised. A broad
issued-based platform dealing exclusively with the demands of the
workers from locked out industries have taken shape, being referred to
as Daabi Manch.

The primary demands are:

1.Till all outstanding dues of the workers are settled, the monthly
financial assistance of Rs. 500 should not be terminated.

2.If the State Government resumes the land of any locked out industry,
the outstanding labour dues has to be settled by the Government.

3.Workers of locked out industries/establishments should be provided
with a minimum of 100 days of work per year by the State Government.

4.Workers of locked out industries/establishments have to be provided
food at an affordable price as per the orders of the Supreme Court
already implemented in some parts of UP and Rajasthan and some tea
plantations in West Bengal.

5.These demands in favour of workers of locked out
industries/establishments will remain valid not only for those covered
by the 'Factory Act' and the 'Plantation Labour Act', but also for
those covered by 'Shop and Establishment Act' and there should be no
attempt to fragment the workers on any basis.

6.The children of workers of locked out industries/establishments
should be freed from all direct and indirect charges involved with
their education.

7.Just like any worker covered by the ESI Scheme who can avail the
Medical Benefits offered by the ESIS after superannuating, as per rule
61 of ESI scheme, the workers of locked out industries/establishments
should be allowed to avail the Medical Benefits of ESIS and the State
Government should bear the requisite annual subscription of Rs. 120 on
behalf of these workers.

8.Till such time that the relevant Rules of the 'West Bengal Factory
Dismantling Act, 1953' is finally framed, the District Magistrates or
Collectors should be empowered to realise all the outstanding dues of
workers on their behalf , whenever and wherever a closed factory is
caused to be dismantled.
 
9.As per  'Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972', the workers will have to
apply for their gratuity dues within 30 days from the date of the
closure of their factories. This 30-day bar has to be suitably
removed.
10.  The employers who flout their statutory obligations of paying the
outstanding dues of the workers should be punished as per the laws of
the land.

11. Suitable budgetary allocations should be made henceforth for the
construction of industrial housing for workers.

During the month of April, 2005 an intense campaign will be launched.
Fifty thousand leaflets, five thousand demand posters will be used and
scores of street corners would be organised both locally and
centrally. There will be a series of sit-ins, representations to the
Chief Minister, press briefings and a Press Conference during the last
week of April. All this will culminate in a 'Bhookhaa Michhil' – a
rally of the hunger-stricken with participation from the civil society
– on May Day 2005.

This, in nutshell, is the second posting of the study Nagarik Mancha
has taken up with support from Sarai/CSDS Independent Fellowship,
2005. Nagarik Mancha (meaning citizen's forum), way back in 1989,
started to function as a solidarity and support group for workers in
closed and sick industries in and around Kolkata. It is a non-funded,
non-party citizen's initiative and is presently active in the field of
labour, industry and environment.

The second lap: 
1.Two teams of activists have started shooting at various locations
where factories have given way to multi-storey apartments and those
factories which are awaiting the same fate.
2.Our activists have taken scores of interviews of workers still
living in the vicinity of their erstwhile factories.
3.Efforts are on to try and collect old photographs of these locations
which have undergone a sea of change after factories have given way to
residential apartments.
4.Efforts are on to identify around 25 factories which have ceased to
exist and has contributed to the change in the urban space at the cost
of worker's.

Let us conclude with the resolve that during the next few months we
will conclusively show that the workers do not vanish into the blue
and the civil society owes it to them to try and fight for their
usurped rights. Maybe we can even win a few battles in the process!
 
Posted by Ashim
On behalf of Nagarik Mancha



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