People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 07 February 16, 2014 |
JAMMU & KASHMIR Road Project Workers Stage
Protest ON January 30, thousands
of workers of the Chenani-Nashri
Four Lane and Tunnel road project organised a militant
protest demonstration at
The
protesting workers
were shouting slogans demanding implementation of labour
laws and the Minimum
Wages Act, reinstatement of workers terminated by the
management from time to
time, withdrawal of false and frivolous cases against
the workers, wages in
lieu of overtime, weekly rest, national holidays to be
paid, grant of casual,
earned and medical leave, and a classification of
workers as skilled,
semi-skilled and unskilled on the basis of the job
performed. Addressing
the workers,
CPI(M) state secretary and CITU state president Mohammad
Yousuf Tarigami said
that the people’s basic right to protest in order to
press their demands is
being crushed whenever they agitate. He pointed out that
the workers are being denied
the basic statuary facilities and are also being
subjected to unlawful victimisation
in the form of rampant dismissal whenever they protest
against the powerful
nexus of contractors, managements, administration and
police. However,
Tarigami warned,
the way right to peaceful protests is being stifled will
only encourage the
emergence of autocratic and violent forces in the
society. He demanded
immediate reinstatement of those workers who have been
terminated and the withdrawal
of false and frivolous cases against them and other
workers. The
trade unions cannot
accept the present state of the state or central
government’s inaction and
indifference on the pressing demands of the workers, the
CPI(M) leader said. He
urged that, in the face of continuing unresponsiveness,
only a broader platform
and united movements of workers can force the government
to listen to the voice
of the oppressed. This working class unity with other
toiling sections of the
society has to be widened and strengthened in order to
oppose exploitation and
the anti-poor policies, he stressed. State
CITU general secretary
Om Prakash lamented that the workers of the
Chenani-Udhampur road project were
not being paid even minimum wages, were not covered
under the social security
schemes like the Employees Provident Fund Act, and not
being paid their
allowances for overtime. There is no sufficient safety
mechanism available to
them. The police are unnecessarily arresting the workers
in fake cases to crush
their protest actions for their genuine rights, he said,
adding that the
management of the project should carry the workers along
instead of taking them
for a ride. Demanding
a stop to police
intervention on workers’ issues, senior trade union
leader Sham Prasad Kesar
said that the workers who have been terminated should be
reinstated without any
further delay and that they must also be provided
facilities under the labour laws.
He stressed the point that the management must avoid
confrontation and find out
an amicable solution to the issues through negotiations
with the
representatives of workers’ unions and associations. Arshid
Malik, president,
and Abdul Rashid, general secretary, of the Four Lane
Construction Workers
Union also addressed the protesting workers. They said
that on the one hand the
government was claiming that these projects will provide
jobs to hundreds of unemployed
youth in the region while, on the other hand, workers
are not only being thrown
out of jobs but also punished with force. (Jagdesh
Chander) JKDYF
PROTESTS ON
PATHRIBAL CASE ON
February 1, activists of the Terming
the closure of the
Pathribal case as unfortunate and unacceptable, the
federation asked the state government
to step in, find a legal way to get the case reopened
and pave way for a
civilian trial. The exoneration of the army personnel,
on the basis of hastily drawn
conclusions, not only deprives justice to the victims
but further erodes the
credibility of state institutions in the matter of
probity and fairness, it
stated. A
JKDYF statement issued
on the occasion said: “The army's self-acquittal of the
Pathribal accused is a
continuation of the cover-ups of human rights violations
in the state. The army
has a free hand in doling out justice as it deems fit
since it enjoys immunity
from law under the draconian Armed Forces Special Powers
Act.” It
further said: “The AFSAPA
provides unfettered rights to the security forces
including the license to
kill.” Terming
the law as the
root cause of human rights violations in the state, the
JKDYF demanded its
immediate revocation from the state. It also demanded
stern action against the
army personnel indicted by the CBI for abduction and
murder of five civilians
in a fake encounter at Pathribal in 2000.