People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)

Vol. XXVII

No. 09

March 02, 2003


Massive Workers March to Parliament

Demands Reversal of Anti-Labour Policies

W R Varada Rajan

THREE lakh workers, toiling in the fields, factories and offices all over the country, converged in New Delhi on February 26 to stage a mammoth ‘March to Parliament’. It was an unequivocal declaration by the toiling masses of the country of their unrelenting struggle against the Government of India’s disastrous anti-people, anti-worker and anti-national policies. These policies have led to the surrender of the country’s economic sovereignty to the international financial institutions and the multinational corporations, resulting in utter pauperisation of the masses.

This march was the culmination of the present phase of working class resistance against the reckless pursuit of the new economic policies of liberalisation, globalisation and privatisation, as a part of which lakhs of workers courted arrest on January 8 this year, staging rail roko, rasta roko and jail bharo programmes.

The February 26 march highlighted the following eight point demands formulated jointly by all the central trade unions and independent unions and federations in the country:

·                          Halt to privatisation of profit making and potentially viable public sector    undertakings

·                          No change in the labour laws in favour of the employers and against the interest    of the workers

·                          Immediate enactment of comprehensive legislation for agricultural workers

·                          No to policies leading to severe aggravation of joblessness and unemployment

·                          Widen comprehensive social security schemes for all, including workers in   unorganised sector

·                          Restoration of quantitative restrictions on imports

·                          Amendment of Payment of Bonus Act by removing all ceilings

·                          Restoration of 12 per cent interest rate on P F Deposits. 

 FAILED POLICIES

But, the government had chosen to turn a deaf ear to the countrywide waves of protest and is carrying forward its retrograde policies that have failed.

Contrary to the government’s claim of having put the national economy back on rails, the economy is going down the disaster lane, with the lowering of the growth rate of GDP, per capita income and agriculture-growth.  The economy is reeling under a severe demand recession due to loss of the purchasing power of the people, consequent upon proliferation of job cut, wage cut, decline in job opportunities and pauperisation of the peasantry.

While the NDA government had been making a ridiculous claim of creating one crore jobs every year, there has been an alarming decline of employment by 8 per cent in two consecutive years. Unemployment is menacingly on the rise, threatening to destroy the social fabric of the nation. Nearly two crore workers have been thrown to streets, in the course of economic reforms. The mad spree of downsizing is threatening the livelihood of the workers in all sectors.

The shift of employment to the informal sector is tremendously on the rise. Outsourcing of jobs by the employers has accentuated the process of informalisation. Workers in the unorganised sector are compelled to work without minimum wage and statutory benefits. Women are the worst victims of economic reforms – underpaid, discriminated, harassed and thrown out of job at the will of the employers.

ATTACK ON LABOUR RIGHTS

A concerted onslaught is unleashed on the workers. Trade unions are being suppressed ruthlessly. The government is all set to implement the recommendation of the Second National Commission on Labour dismantling all rights of the workers and facilitating hire and fire of workers, indiscriminate out-sourcing of jobs and closure of industrial units.

The government is moving arbitrarily to introduce the Unorganised Sector Workers Bill 2003, brushing aside the demand of the trade unions that the Bill should address issues of employment regulation, improvement in service conditions, provision of health, safety, social security and welfare of these workers, comprising over 90 per cent of the workforce in the country.

TOWARDS COUNTRYWIDE GENERAL STRIKE

The workers assembled at different points in Delhi marched through three different routes in impressive processions to assemble at the Ramlila Maidan, from where a huge procession started out to move towards the Parliament. They were stopped by the Delhi poice at the interjection of Maharaja Ranjit Singh Road and the Barakhambha Road. A massive gathering which squatted all along the Ranjit Singh flyover was addressed by the leaders of the central trade unions viz. the CITU, AICCTU, AITUC, HMS, INTUC, TUCC, UTUC and UTUC-LS, along with the leaders of industry-wise federations in Railways, Banks, Insurance, Defence and the State and Central Government employees. HMKP, Mumbai based Kamgar Agadhi, AIFTU, IFTU and NTUI also joined the march and extended support to the declaration.

M K Pandhe, general secretary, CITU, while addressing the meeting congratulated the working class of the country for their massive participation in the March to Parliament programme. Supporting the declaration placed for adoption before the gathering he exhorted the workers and the trade union activists, returning after participation in the inspiring march, to take the message of the declaration to the mass of the workers and start hectic preparations for the strike.

The workers and employees of different sectors, who came from far and near, unanimously adopted a declaration putting the Government of India on notice that in the event of the government persisting with their disastrous anti-labour and anti-people policies, they will stage an all India general strike before the end of the budget session. A wider consultation meeting will be held in New Delhi on March 12 which will take steps to broad base the struggle against the government policies and also decide the date of the all India General Strike.

The huge gathering of workers also condemned the US move for launching an attack on Iraq, by adopting unanimously a resolution on the subject. The trade unions will also mobilise all sections of the masses to oppose the unjust war on Iraq and defend world peace.