People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 01 January 01, 2012 |
TRADITION OF UNITED
STRUGGLES TO CONTINUE On To Making Feb 28 General
Strike A Great Success
A K Padmanabhan THE
year that has just gone
by, was a tumultuous one with massive upsurges, struggles
and movements in
various parts of the world. The crisis in the capitalist
economy has brought
untold miseries to the working population due to continuous
attacks on their
hard won rights and on their livelihoods. As
the world welcomes the New
Year 2012, all predictions are that the present crisis
situation is bound to
continue. None of the ‘pundits’ is expecting any improvement
worldwide. On the
contrary, many are the predictions of a gloomy future. WORKING PEOPLE’S RESPONSE TO CRISIS Working
people all over
the world have responded to these crises and attacks with
massive strikes and
struggles. Though the Arab Spring of the beginning of 2011
created hope for
more positive changes, the experiences have been otherwise.
Some negative forces
have come to the fore in countries like The
“Occupy Wall Street”
movement, which began in September 2011, generated a new
wave of protest actions
in different parts of the word. This movement is significant
as its target is
the capitalist system itself. Though one cannot be sure of
what its future will
be, the impact that it has made upon the masses is of
crucial importance. The
neo-liberal policies
thrust upon the masses during the last 20 years have had
disastrous impacts on
all aspects of life and the resistance is growing. INDIAN SITUATION In The
platform of united
actions has seen further strengthening. All the eleven
central trade union
organisations came together on September 7, 2011, and all
the industrial
federations have decided to support the call of the central
trade union
organisations. The
comprehensive charter
of demands, which the central trade union organisations have
put forward, contains
important issues that are connected with the life of all the
toiling sections
in the country. Issues like price rise, public distribution
system, employment,
social security, privatisation, minimum wages, the system of
exploitation of contract
workers, implementation of labour laws and welfare measures
and, above all, that
of freedom of association and right to collective bargaining
are all included
in the trade unions’ charter. After
the massive and countrywide
Jail Bharo agitation on November 8 on these demands,
preparations call for the
next phase of action has begun. Soon there is going to be a
countrywide general
strike on February 28, 2012. GENERAL STRIKES IN PAST DECADES The
general strike scheduled
to take place on February 28 will be the 14th countrywide
strike after the
government of However,
the trend of united
struggle had already begun in the 1980s. With
the workers and
employees now preparing for the next strike on February 28,
one is reminded of
the first countrywide strike and its background. There
took place a massive
convention of trade unions against price rise and
anti-labour policies of the government
in Mumbai on June 4, 1981. Leaders and cadre of eight
central trade union
organisations --- the CITU, AITUC, BMS, HMS, UTUC, UTUC(LS),
TUCC and also a
section of the INTUC --- and as many as 55 industrial
federations participated in
this convention led to the formation of the National Campaign
Committee (NCC). Here,
3000 delegates who came from all over
the country unanimously adopted a charter of demands that
included demands pertaining
to workers, peasants, agricultural workers and other
sections of the toiling
people in It is
important to note here
that while that convention was organised by the trade
unions, the charter of
demands included demands like remunerative prices for
agricultural produce, minimum
wages for agricultural workers and a comprehensive national
legislation for agricultural
workers. Other demands related to the public distribution
system, need based
minimum wages, higher bonus, correction of the faulty
consumer price index, recognition
of trade unions through secret ballot, unhindered right to
collective bargaining
and withdrawal of black acts like the National Security Act
(NSA). The
NCC called for a
massive March to Parliament on November 23, 1981. The
response to that call was
historic and massive, with more than five lakh men and women
marching to the
Boat Club lawns in the capital. By
that time, the
government at the centre had promulgated the Essential
Services Maintenance
Ordinance (ESMO) that aimed at penalising the workers who
wanted to struggle
against injustices meted out to them by employers and the
government. The home
ministry of the government of B T
Ranadive thus explained
the significance of the massive participation in the
November 23 rally: “The
mighty demonstration of trade union and working class unity
on November 23 constitutes
an important event in the country’s trade union movement.
Never before had workers
and employees from so many industries and concerns, from all
states and
belonging to so many central trade union organisations and
federations,
participated in a common demonstration in the capital. The
contingents came
from all states, from the public and private sector, from
railways and defence
services, from central and state government organisations,
from steel, coal,
mining, jute, textile, engineering and other industries.
They demonstrated
against the anti-labour policies of the Indira (Gandhi)
government. They
protested against the ESMA and demanded its withdrawal. They
raised their voice
against high prices on behalf of the entire people and
demanded supply of
essential goods to the people at cheap prices through the
public distribution
system. The voice of the united working class was raised on
behalf of the
peasantry when the trade unions demanded remunerative prices
for the peasants’
produce. It was raised on behalf of the monstrously
exploited agricultural
workers when they demanded a decent wage for agricultural
labour. The new
awakening among the trade unions was further marked by the
participation of a
big contingent of working women, carrying their trade union
banners.” It
was this rally at the Boat
Club that called for a countrywide general strike on January
19, 1982. It was
resolved that the “only answer to the strike banning should
be through a strike.” COUNTRYWIDE PREPARATIONS A
massive campaign all
over the country, including state and industry level
conventions, preceded the
rally on November 23, 1981. Various sections of workers and
employees --- loco
men, LIC, GIC, PSU employees and others --- as well as
peasants and
agricultural workers in different parts of the country
joined the struggle. Peasant
organisations had already organised a big rally in Delhi on
March 26, 1981. In
this background, the
call for a strike created enthusiasm among all sections of
the people. The organisations
of peasants and agricultural workers came out in support of
the strike and
decided to participate in it. The
central and many state
governments let loose severe repression on the workers.
Thousands were arrested
in the days preceding the strike. The strike was fully
successful and historic,
with the participation of workers from all sectors as well
as of peasants and
agricultural workers. It resulted in a virtual bandh in many
states despite the
brutal repression by the governments. Ten
people were killed in
police firing on the day. In Tamilnadu, three agricultural
workers were killed
by the police while two were killed in Andhra Pradesh. More
than 50,000 persons
were sent to jail. The police and hired goons resorted to
baton charges and other
forms of attack in many centres. Then
began a round of attacks
on the people’s livelihood by the government and the ruling
classes, who had by
that time reached a clandestine agreement with the
International Monetary Fund.
But then the workers, peasants and other sections of the
people also began
their resistance of these policies through militant
protests. B T
Ranadive and P
Ramamurti, the then president and general secretary
respectively of the CITU, congratulated
the millions of workers who have joined the strike braving
barbarous repression
and creating history in annals of the trade union movement
in the country. An
editorial in the February 1982 issue of The
Working Class commented that the working class had
“smashed political barriers
and unitedly launched the strike action not merely on
economic demands but on
political demands as well – against price rise, anti-labour
polices of the government,
against Essential Services Maintenance Act and the National
Security Act.” The
editorial also noted that “the strike gave new dimensions to
the working class
movement in the country. Championing the cause of the
peasantry, the
agricultural labourers and the entire people, the working
class hit at the
basic policies of the government --- pro-feudal,
pro-monopolist and
pro-multinational --- against
deficit-financing
and inflation, which are responsible for the spiralling
prices heaping miseries on the common people and eroding the
very basis of the
democratic process.” A
CITU general council meeting
correctly noted that through united protests, and especially
the January 19 strike,
the trade unions were realising that they could combat the
economic and
political policies of the government only on the strength of
their class unity.
For, questions like rising prices, inflation, deficit
financing, imports and
exports policy, IMF loan or ESMA and NSA were not matters
that could be
remedied by a section of the working class alone. On these
issues, the working
class needed to face the government unitedly as a class. TOWARDS FEBRUARY 28 If we
have recalled here
the experience of the first strike in 1982, it was to stress
the point that the
united efforts that had begun in 1982 and continued all
through the years of neo-liberal
offensive, have to be further strengthened now. The
call for the one-day general
strike on February 28 has been given by all the eleven
central trade unions and
supported by all industrial federations. A
look at the charter of
demands shows the continuity and the necessity to carry the
struggle forward. There
is also on the
horizon the possibility of much larger unity with various
other sections. The
countrywide strike by retail traders on December 1, 2011,
against the government’s
decision to allow 51 per cent FDI in the retail trade, is an
important step in
the struggle against the so called “second generation
reforms.” It is to be
noted that struggle and concerted political action has
forced the government to
place this particular decision in abeyance. However,
the government of
India has enough demonstrated how much it is adamant to go
ahead with the next
phase of retrograde legislations in the attractive name of
‘reforms.’ These include
the insurance, banking and pension sectors. This sets the
stage for many more
sectoral struggles and campaigns. In
this situation, we need
to take the message of the general strike, the demands and
the importance of
unity of central trade union organisations and federations
down to every
factory, office and work place and also to the masses in
general. This is a
must in order to make the impending general strike, on the
eve of the presentation
of the union budget in parliament, a real warning to the UPA
government against
proceeding ahead with its anti-people policies. The
need of the day to carry
forward the banner of united struggles with the urge to
rebuff these policies. The
need of the day is to make the proposed general strike a
great success.