People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
52 December 27, 2009 |
LIC Agents Hold
Protest Rally,
Dharna in Mumbai
P R Kishnan
AZAD MAIDAN in
The aim of the rally and
demonstration was to press
for the long pending demands of the LIC agents and to prevent the
process of
privatisation of this giant public sector insurance corporation. The
main
demands of the LIC agents were as below:
1) Withdrawal of the LIC
Amendment Bill 2009, Insurance
Amendment Bill 2008, Agent�s Regulations 1972 and Revised Club Rules.
2) Scrapping of the Swarup
committee report.
3) Giving up direct marketing by
the LIC.
4) Implementation of the demands
agreed upon earlier.
5) Ensured job security for the
agents.
6) Introduction of a pension
welfare fund and
mediclaim for the agents.
7) Protection for the bonus paid
to the policyholders.
8) Reduction in the interest on
policy loans.
The protesting LIC agents began
pouring into the
Maidan in small groups and processions, with flags and banners in their
hands.
In fact, a majority of them had come a day earlier from different
zones, states
and union territories. By 11 a m, the portion of the Maidan separately
allotted
by the police for the LIC agents� dharna, became full. But when the
flow
continued, the police had to open the enclosure and allow the
participants to
occupy the space adjoining the allotted area. The proceedings of the
meeting
began with a welcome address by C A Joseph, vice president of the LIC
Agents�
Organisation, while S S Potti (the LICAOI working president) who
presided.
Basudev Acharya, MP, was to inaugurate the programme but he could not
reach
Mumbai as he was required to be in
Though it is December when it is
supposed to be wintry
in Mumbai, the climate on the day was unusual and extremely hot. Yet,
unmindful
of the scorching sun, the protesters sat on the tarpaulins in the
Maidan,
listening to their leaders. The protesting demonstrators were addressed
by
leaders from different states and zones. Among them were P G Dileep
(general
secretary, LICAOI) N R Thevethara (former MP), Somnath Bhattacharyam
(secretary)
L Manjunath (secretary), R P Bharadwaj (vice president), M Selwaraj
(secretary),
and Ajit Bhawan Ghosh (vice president of the organisation). As per the
organisers� estimation, the number of participants in this action
programme was
approximately 10,000. Quite a substantial number of them were women.
The Mumbai rally and dharna,
which had the character
of an all-India action programme of the LIC agents, became necessary
because of
the retrograde measures the LIC management is contemplating for
ultimately
privatising this insurance giant. Therefore the organisers thought it
necessary
to select Mumbai, which houses the LIC headquarters, as the most
appropriate venue
to stage their action programme which received wide publicity and media
coverage here.
One may note here that it was in
1956 that the
government brought under its control a myriad of private insurance
companies,
which were daily perpetuating frauds upon their policyholders, and
formed the Life
Insurance Corporation of
The total assets of these
private insurance companies
at the time of their nationalisation and amalgamation into one holding
company,
i.e. Life Insurance Corporation of India, in 1956 was Rs five crore
only. However,
the assets of this premier institution have now reached up to Rs nine
lakh
crore, apart from a separate Life Fund of Rs 8,50,000 crore. The total
number
of policyholders is 25 crore and 78 lakh at present, while the number
of
business canvassing agents is 13 lakh and 30 thousand. (Out of them,
2,80,000
agents are full-fledged members of the LIC Agents� Organisation of
India.) This
is the biggest life insurance company in the world and, that too, in
the public
sector. The government is utilising the funds of this giant institution
for
several developmental activities.
Now, it is this megalithic
institution that the UPA
government is now trying to dismantle. Its purpose, not so secret, is
to help the
private sector insurance companies. Once the two bills now proposed by
the
government are passed by the parliament, the present agents on whose
toil and
moil the assets of LIC has grown from Rs five crore in 1956 to Rs nine
lakh
crore with a life separate fund of Rs 8,50,000 crore, will lose their
renewal
commissions as well as hereditary family commissions. In addition, if
the
Swarup committee report is implemented, no commission will be required
to be
paid to the agents by the corporation, thus jeopardising the livelihood
of
about 9.8 lakh self-employed LIC agents. The proposal is that they must
collect
the commission directly from the policyholders, as is the practice in
the
developed countries. This too is an example, along with many others, of
the
anti-people policies of the government. It is to prevent such
anti-people
measures that the LIC agents organised their all-India protest dharna
in
Mumbai.
In accordance with its working
class spirit, the LIC Agents�
Organisation had sent out invitations to all the central trade union
organisations in
One of the mention-worthy
features of the programme on
the day was the release of a magazine of the LIC agents. This new
publication
is captioned LICAOI Voice. S S Potti (working
president of the organisation) released this magazine by handling over
a copy
to
After the dharna and
demonstration, leaders of the
organisation submitted a memorandum to the LIC chairman, demanding
withdrawal
of the anti-people steps being utilised. Through the memorandum, they
also
demanded implementation of the terms of understanding reached earlier
between
the management and the LIC Agents� Organisation. The fact of the
non-implementation of this agreement only shows that the government is
adamant
and unwilling to concede to the demands. But the LIC agents have now
issued a
warning that they would be forced to launch a powerful agitation if
this
attitude on the part of the government persists.