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Category Archives: TU News – India

TU News from India

Kingfisher workers protest non-payment of salary

07 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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agitation, Kingfisher, workers

Hundreds of workers of Kingfisher held a silent protest before its Mumbai Office yesterday against non-payment of salaries since July2012. They demanded immediate payment of salary. While the workers are in extreme difficulties due to non-receipt of salary for the last one year, its owner Vijay Mallaya is going on foreign tour for the Formula I Championship, of which he is a part-owner.

The workers have held a hunger strike a few days back. Many workers from out stations are also participating in the agitational programmes.

While the workers are in the streets to get their wages, the owner is in preparation to enjoy festivals and tournaments. The government and Labour Department stand as mute spectators.

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14th Conference of CITU : Immediate Tasks

29 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India, Uncategorized

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14th AIC, CITU, Tasks

The Immediate tasks outlined for the coming period by the 14th AIC of CITU is reproduced below:

1. Week-long intensive campaign at all workplaces and industrial areas commencing from CITU Foundation Day on 30th May 2013 focusing on demands;

i)      Minimum Wage at not less than Rs 10,000 per month and its linkage with consumer price index for the purpose of Dearness Allowance; ii)     Same Wage as regular workers for same and similar work for the contract workers in respective industries and establishments to be enforced stringently through appropriate amendment of Contract Labour (Regulation & Abolition ) Act 1970; and iii)     Universal Social Security coverage and assured pension for all workers both in unorganized and organized sector;

–     Covering widest spectrum of workers and activising all union level committees;  –     Widespread distribution of handbills; pasting posters, holding gate-meetings, shop level meetings, at workers’ residential colonies, area level meetings etc to be decided by the state/district/area/union level committees; –     Aiming to reach widest sections of workers irrespective of their affiliations; –     State committees monitoring and sending reports to CITU centre with every details including number of printed materials circulated and number of workers directly covered.

2.     The campaign is to culminate in next week-long massive mobilization and agitation, the form to be decided by the state committees, at district/block/ tehsil  level or staging dharna before the central/state government offices.

 

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CITU completes 43 years of fruitful service

29 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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30 May, CITU Day

On 30th May 2013, Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) completes 43 years of fruitful service to the workers. It was formed on 30th May 1970 at the Conference of progressive workers held at at Calcutta from 28th to 31 May 1970. The first President was Com.B.T.Ranadive and General Secretary Com. P.Ramamoorthy. Comrades Samar Mukherjee, E.Balanandan, M.K.Pandhe, Chittabrata Majumdar and  Mohammed Amin also occupied the posts of President/General Secretary during later period. At present Com. A.K.Padmanabhan is the President and Com. Tapan Sen the General Secretary. The 14th All India Conference was conducted at Kannur on 4-8 April 2013.

It will be only appropriate to reproduce a small note on the CITU  from the documents of the organisation itself which will give a brief picture of CITU.

“The CITU represents workers in every field of trade activities including the workers in industrial and service sectors like Coal, Electricity, Steel, Heavy Engineering, Construction, Electronics, Oil & Natural Gas – production and refining, Petrochemicals, Fertilisers, Pharmaceuticals, Rail, Road, Air & Water Transport, Port & Docks, Telecommunications, Textile, Financial & other service sectors, Plantation, etc. Apart from the organised sector, the CITU has got pioneering role in organising the unorganised and informal sector workers, which dominate the numerical strength of the work force in India.
Yet another important segment of the trade union movement in the country is the working women. Organising the working women is a priority agenda of CITU. The All India Coordination Committee of Working Women (CITU) had been functioning for over two decades, focusing its attention on mobilising the women workers and promoting women cadres to leadership position in the trade unions.
The CITU has fraternal links with the trade union centres in several countries and frequent exchange of views/communications, mutual visits by delegations are regularly taking place. The CITU has been participating in seminars, workshops and other meets organised by different agencies at national and international levels on various issues, especially pertaining to the working class and trade union movement.
The CITU is bringing out its official monthly organ `The Working Class’ (in English) and “CITU Mazdoor” (in Hindi). The CITU has published a large number of books and pamphlets, both in English and Hindi, covering various subjects of interest to the working class.
At enterprise level, activity of the CITU unions pertains to organising workers for achieving better wages, service condition, health and safety, etc and through those activities consolidating the collective strength and consciousness of the workers. Besides the above, the CITU unions also intervene in the various aspects of management of the enterprise seeking greater involvement of the workers in the efficient running of the enterprise and for strengthening participative mechanism at enterprise-level.
The CITU unions also carry on detailed study of the technology at the industry level to equip them for effective intervention. Side by side the CITU unions have undertaken the task of uniting other trade unions and also officers’ organisations in the enterprise level to pressurise the management, government and the related agencies for redressal of workers’ grievances at the enterprise/industry level.
Apart from the fight against the onslaughts of imperialist globalisation in general, the CITU is engaged in particular in the fight against the anti-people policies of liberalisation and privatisation. The important issues before the trade union movement in the country, inter alia, are attacks on trade union right, right to strike, right to collective bargaining, pro-employer retrograde changes in the labour laws, reduction of social security, closure of industrial units and massive retrenchment of workers, outsourcing and casualisation/informalisation of employment, menacing growth of unemployment, etc. In India, the present coalition government at the national level has been promoting religious fanaticism and engineering sectarian violence to divide the working class and the people in the country on religious communal lines. They are employing such notorious tactics to cover their failure on all fronts and to divert the attention of the people from the hardships of life and livelihood. The CITU is engaged in the struggle against such divisive forces, defending the unity of working class.
At macro level, the CITU has undertaken the task for uniting the trade union movement as a whole in the struggle for reshaping the government policy in the overall interest of the national economy, sustainable and self-reliant industrial development, the working class and common people. The CITU has been playing pivotal role in strengthening the unity and struggles of working class in the country. Widespread agitation in different forms all over the country, local and national levels demonstrations by millions of workers and countrywide strikes have been organised jointly by the central trade unions and federations of industrial workers and government employees. While pursuing this task, the CITU also took initiative in uniting the mass organisations of peasantry, agricultural workers, students, youth, women and other professionals also. This led to formation of National Platform of Mass Organisations, a platform which organised many countrywide strikes and various other agitations and campaigns. Recently, the apex judiciary in the country, the Supreme Court of India, came out with a judgement, with pronouncements denying the workers of their ‘Right to Strike’. The CITU, along with the other CTUs had been spearheading the resistance struggle to get the pernicious impact of the judgement nullified. The period ahead is slated to witness nationwide united strikes to defend the right to strike, as well as more anti-privatisation strikes in the different industrial sectors like Coal, Oil & Refinery, Electricity, and Financial Sectors.”
 On the 43rd foundation anniversary of CITU, I convey my Revolutionary Greetings and Best Wishes to CITU, its leaders and members throughout the country!
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EPF contribution to include all allowances also – employers oppose

28 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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Contribution, EPFO, ESI

At present, contribution to the EPF is calculated on the basis of 12% of basic pay and dearness allowance, which will be deducted from the salary of the employee and remitted to EPFO. Same amount is to be contributed by the employers also. To reduce contribution to EPF, many employers, corporates etc. are not increasing the salary, but will increase the allowances etc. on which EPF contribution need not be remitted.  The contribution to ESI also is not increased. But at the same time, the employee will have to pay tax for the entire amount including the allowances.

The Employees Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) had already proposed that all the allowances should be included for calculation of the EPF contribution. The EPFO is going to notify the provision so that the employees will get the benefit. But the employers and corporates are opposing the same and trying to influence the government so aas  to avoid contributing the increased amount.

The government should take a strong stand and ensure that the workers’ rights of getting higher contribution is implemented.

 

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Delhi High Court issues notice to Idea for violation of orders

28 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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3G, Delhi HC, Idea, notice

Delhi High Court on 27th May issued  notices to Idea Cellular and its top executives including Chairman Kumaramangalam Birla for violation of its earlier order prohibiting the company from providing 3G service to customers in circles where it has not been allotted spectrum for the purpose.

The private companies like Idea,Vodafone, Airtel etc. have been providing the 3G services illegally in many circles with out allocation of spectrum through the licences of other companies. it is to be noted that BSNL was compulsorily allotted 3G spectrum in all circles and charged a hefty amount for the same, while these private companies by paying a small amount was providing service in all the circles.

The govt. should act strongly and cancel the licences of these erring companies instead of making compromises.

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45th Indian Labour Conference – A report by CITU

23 Thursday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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45th ILC, report

I am herewith reproducing a report on the 45th Indian  Labour Conference by Com. K  Hemalata, Secretary CITU.

The 45th session of the Indian Labour Conference (ILC), the annual tripartite meeting of the workers, employers and governments was held on 17-18 May 2013 in Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi. The agenda in this session included four topics – ‘Service conditions, wages and social security for various categories of workers employed in different central government and state government schemes (Anganwadi, mid day meal, ASHA, Sarva Siksha Abhiyan and other schemes under various ministries of central government), ‘Social security with special reference to assured pension with indexation for all workers including self employed’, ‘Labour Law for Micro and Small Enterprises’ and ‘Measures to improve employment and employability’. The Union minister for labour and employment Mallikarjuna Kharge chaired the session which was inaugurated by Prime Minster Manmohan Singh. Tapan Sen, general secretary, Hemalata, Prasanna Kumar and AR Sindhu, all national secretaries represented CITU in the plenary session and in the groups that discussed each topic in detail. The Prime Minster reiterated that as Prime Minster he participated in all the sessions of the ILC, except one during his tenure. However, this time too, as usual, he did not find it necessary to spend at least a few minutes listening to the workers’ representatives in the ILC. However, he had to refer to the two days’ strike and the demands raised by it while inaugurating the session. It may be recalled that he did not utter a single word in his inaugural address to the 44th session of ILC about the countrywide general strike, on the same demands, just a fortnight later on 28th February 2012. The Prime Minster said that the ‘recent two day strike by Trade Unions focussed on a number of issues relating to the welfare not only of the working classes but also the people at large’. He classified the demands into three sets and said that ‘demands for concrete measures for containing inflation, for generation of employment opportunities, for strict implementation of labour laws, are unexceptionable’ and ‘there can be no disagreement’ on these. Some other demands, like ‘universal social security cover for workers in both the organised and unorganised sectors, creation of a National Social Security Fund, fixing a National Floor Level Minimum Wage and provision of a minimum pension of Rs 1000 per month under the Employees’ Pension Scheme’, he said, are under an ‘advanced stage of consideration’ by the government. He sought to mislead the house, as the demand of the trade unions was a national minimum wage, not national ‘Floor level’ minimum wage. And the ‘third set’ of demands according to him relate to issues on which ‘further dialogue with trade union leaders’ was necessary and the government has set up a Group of Ministers under the Finance Minster to go into the whole gamut of demands raised by the trade unions. It took nearly four years of continuous struggles by the entire trade union movement including jail bharo, marches to the Parliament and three country wide general strikes for the Prime Minster to realise that these demands raised by the trade unions ‘reflect the concern that our growth and progress should be inclusive and should particularly benefit the under privileged sections of our society’. This probably reflects the neoliberal mindset that chooses to totally ignore and dismiss the trade unions as ‘anti development’. Despite the ‘pride’ expressed by Manmohan Singh in attending all the Indian Labour Conferences since he became Prime Minster, the importance that the government gives to the recommendations of the Indian Labour Conference is seen in the fact that while the 44th ILC has recommended that ‘the government should take the necessary steps to fix minimum wages as per the norms/ criteria recommended by the 15th ILC and the directions of the Supreme Court in the Raptakos & Brett case’, what his cabinet approved is ‘amendment to the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 to provide only for a statutory National Floor Level Minimum Wage’. Mum on Scheme Workers The NSSO survey shows that the labour force participation of women has alarmingly come down between 2004- 05 and 2009 – 10, with more than 2 crore women disappearing from the labour force. But strangely the Prime Minster expressed his happiness that ‘women employment in the organised sector has registered a growth of about 19%’ between 2005 and 2011. Did he have the lakhs of ‘scheme workers’, the anganwadi employees, the ASHAs, the mid day meal workers, etc – the workers not even recognised as workers and paid a measly ‘honorarium’ or ‘incentive’ – working in his government’s various departments in mind? Different segments of ‘scheme workers’ have been conducting many militant and powerful struggles through their own organisations separately and jointly for a long time. CITU took up the issues of all the ‘scheme workers’ and in November 2012 mobilised the workers employed in several central government schemes and conducted a massive two days ‘mahapadav’ near Parliament after a countrywide campaign for more than two months. As a result of these campaigns and struggles and the insistence of CITU and several other central trade unions to include their conditions for discussion in the ILC, this was included as the first agenda of the ILC. But the Prime Minister was totally silent on their issues. This, despite his earlier assertion that they were the pillars of human development, acknowledgment that their conditions need to be improved and specific assurance in the case of the anganwadi employees that they would be provided some ‘parting gift’ when they were being retired after decades of service. This has naturally highly disappointed all the trade union representatives and the around 1 crore ‘scheme workers’ who were eagerly waiting for some positive response from the Prime Minister in the ILC. Intervening in the discussions in the plenary session, Tapan Sen gave expression to their feelings when he said that the Prime Minister should at least have reflected upon the ‘most crucial of the agendas of the 45th session of the ILC – the issue of more than one crore workers like the anganwadi employees, mid day meal workers, ASHAs, para teachers etc employed in various central government schemes who and are playing most crucial role in their implementation. They are providing the basic services essential for human development, the development of women and children in our country, like heath care, maternal care, education etc. These workers are not even recognised as workers and are thus being denied minimum wage and minimum social security benefits and are forced to retire empty handed after 30 or more years of service. Is it or should it be permissible in any civilised society? The government must have to act to end such gross inhuman impropriety and this Indian Labour Conference must dedicate itself for the same’. While welcoming the statement of the Prime Minister that there can be no disagreement on the demands like containing inflation and strict implementation of the labour laws, which were unexceptionable, Tapan Sen ridiculed his caveat that ‘there can however be differences on the best way of fulfilling these demands’. He placed several issues before the ILC in response to the Prime Minister’s readiness ‘to constructively engage with the trade unions’. Tapan Sen said that strict implementation of labour laws required a paradigm shift in the style of governance. He observed that the entire labour law administration and labour relations management has become a kind of public private partnership (PPP) between the government machinery and corporate employers to promote violation and evasion of labour laws on almost every aspect – minimum wage, working hours, social security, workplace safety, contract work and related issues all over the country. There was perpetual exploitation of the workers; labour rights were being suppressed, often with inhuman brutality. He said that this PPP project of administration employers combine was operating in keeping more than two hundred workers and trade union activists behind bars for around three months in Noida in Uttar Pradesh for taking part in the strike on 20th February 2013. They are denied bail even today. It is the same PPP model of collaboration between the Haryana government and the Suzuki Corporation that engineered the most heinous crime of putting in jail 185 workers of Maruti Suzuki plant in Manesar, who have been languishing in jail for more than a year now and terminating the services of 500 regular workers and 1200 contract workers in a most unlawful manner, without even conducting an enquiry. There are many such examples. This PPP of the government and employers is only meant to suppress the workers, trample all labour laws under foot under state sponsorship and facilitate the illegitimate gains and maximisation of profit for the employers. This PPP model, Tapan Sen said, was not confined to the area of labour management alone. It is all pervasive and rampant in every aspect of governance benefiting the handful of private players at the cost of the people. This philosophy in the arena of tax collection is preventing tax collection from the big corporations whose direct tax arrears have mounted to Rs 482000 crore in 2012, an increase of 94% in two years. Such generous permission to the corporates to loot the workers as well as the public exchequer is being justified in the name of incentives for investment. But, Tapan Sen pointed out, despite all such encouragement to loot the workers and the exchequer, the share of the private corporates in total domestic investment has been continuously declining, particularly since 2009, reaching a mere 29.8% in 2012. Thus the very ostentatious purpose of active promotion of the PPP model stands defeated. The urgent need of the hour is a total change in the notorious PPP philosophy that promotes violation of labour laws, repression and suppression of the rights of the workers who create GDP for the country, generate revenue for the exchequer and contribute to the profits of the employers. If the government is serious in putting into practice the statement of the Prime Minister on implementation of labour laws it must immediately stop this PPP model in governance. Labour laws should be enforced instead of talking of the so called self compliance. Otherwise all the tall talk of social partnership and social dialogue remain a mere hoax. Tapan Sen also warned the government on the illegitimate drainage of public funds to the so called private vocational training providers under the PPP model of skill development through various schemes. Fake claims of reimbursement of training expenditure were being made which is now being enquired into by the CBI. Training and skill development initiatives should not be allowed to get converted into a profitable business for private interests through PPP route, he insisted. The agenda items were discussed in separate committees and their recommendations were placed in the plenary that adopted them.  There was general consensus in the conference committee on the conditions of the ‘scheme workers’ that their conditions must be improved. The major recommendations of the committee are – i) the scheme workers should be first recognised as ‘workers’ and not called ‘volunteers’ or honorary workers; ii) they should be paid minimum wages; iii)they should get all the social security benefits like pension, gratuity, maternity benefits etc; iv) to begin with social security schemes like Aam Admi Bima Yojana, Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana should be extended to these workers; v) one time gratuity/ lump sum payment should be made to anganwadi employees who have already retired or will be retiring in the near future; vi) they should have the right to organise and collective bargaining, vii) the respective departments should formulate ‘Employment Standing Orders’ for these workers to regulate their employment and service conditions; viii) the workers who are employed on contract basis should be retained for all such subsequent activities and ix) the service conditions of the teachers and staff of the NCLP schools should be ameliorated along with appropriate infrastructural and amenities. However, even as all the trade union representatives, the employers’ representatives and the representatives of all the state governments fully supported these recommendations, the representatives of the Ministry of Women and Child Development and the Ministry of Education and Literacy in charge of mid day meal programme opposed the recognition of the ‘scheme workers’ as workers, payment of minimum wages and pension and a lump sum amount to those who were being ‘disengaged’. This attitude of the concerned ministries which employed lakhs of workers, most of them women, like the anganwadi employees and the mid day meal workers was strongly criticised by the trade union representatives in the plenary, when it was placed there. The conference committee on ‘Social security with special reference to assured pension’ made the following recommendations – i)universal social security coverage should be provided for the entire working population of the country; appropriate steps should be taken to remove the prevalent hurdles, such as restricting them to BPL categories, to achieve this objective; ii) the entire working population of the country should have access to assured pension at the end of their working lives; iii) the EPS 1995 should, as the first step provide minimum assured pension of Rs 1000 pm; iv) the pensionary benefits available to the beneficiaries should be responsive to price rise; v) the New Pension Scheme (NPS) should be suitably modified to provide for assured pension to the members; vi) the current government spending on social security schemes as a percentage of GDP should be increased. In addition the committee reiterated the recommendations of the 44th session of ILC and asked that they should be implemented at the earliest. It also requested the government to examine enacting legislation providing for the ‘Right to work and pension’ in line with the Right to Information and the Right to Education Acts. There were diverse opinions in the committee on the micro and small enterprises. While the employers’ associations expressed difficulties in compliance of the multiple labour laws in the micro and small enterprises and wanted a comprehensive law for these enterprises, the trade union representatives asserted that any measures taken for promoting micro and small enterprises should ensure that the interests of the workers employed in these establishments should not be compromised and the basic requirements like minimum wages, social security and welfare benefits and working and service conditions of the workers are adequately addressed. The committee, however recommended that i) any suggestion or proposals made for rationalisation or simplification of procedures in compliance of labour laws should be examined by the Ministry of Labour and Employment for appropriate action; ii) a tripartite committee having representatives of all stakeholders including employers’ associations, trade unions and central and state government representatives should be constituted for examining all aspects of labour laws affecting the working of the micro and small enterprises and submit its recommendations on any further actions The committee on ‘Measures to improve employment and employability’ reiterated the recommendations of the 44th session of ILC like early finalisation of the National Employment policy, more investments in labour intensive industries, increasing access to skill development to the SC, ST, OBC, minorities and the differently abled persons with special focus on women. In addition it made several recommendations that include i) specific measures to be decided and quantified for enhancement of employment opportunities, ii) continued investment in infrastructure development, iii) promoting manufacturing and service sector units, iv) establishment of well structured holistic labour market information system, vi) increase outreach of skill development to rural, hilly inaccessible areas, vii) increase the number of ITIs and skill development centres, viii) lift the ban on recruitment and fill up all the existing vacancies, ix) industry to enhance seats for apprenticeship training; x) bring the micro, small and medium enterprises under the purview of Apprentices Act and xi) take up public awareness campaign on skill development, particularly in the rural areas CITU’S PROPOSALS The CITU has circulated its concrete position and proposals on all the agenda items under discussion, which are as follows: On the conditions of the scheme workers it proposals included ? Recognise the anganwadi workers and helpers, the mid day meal workers, ASHAs, para teachers, and all such workers/ employees employed in the various schemes/ programmes of the government of India as workers/ employees, of the concerned department ? Pay minimum wages to all these workers/ employees and link them with consumer price index ? Constitute welfare fund at the central level to provide social security benefits including maternity benefits, provident fund, medical benefits, gratuity, pension etc to all these workers/ employees ? Recognise the right to organise and collective bargaining of all these workers On social security and assured pension CITU strongly asserted that the New Pension Scheme (NPS) being a defined contribution scheme can never ensure an ‘assured pension with indexation provision’ for the self employed persons, as mentioned in the agenda note. It proposed ? Assured pension as defined benefit to all workers; the government and the employers must shoulder the responsibility to ensure this basic social security for all workers/ employees ? Restore all the unilateral curtailments of various benefits under EPS 1995; the government and the employers should shoulder the responsibility of sharing the additional burden of 0.63% required for ensuring minimum monthly pension of Rs 1000 per month ? Positive consideration of the unanimous recommendation of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Labour that government should contribute at least half the rate of employers’ contribution to pension fund (The Standing Committee in this context, considered the diversion of 8.33% from the provident fund to pension as employers’ contribution) ? Social security savings/ accumulation should be paid higher rate of interest compared to other commercial deposits as it is a long term recurring deposit from the workers and employers ? Indexation of pension should be seriously considered On Labour Law for Micro and small enterprises CITU questioned the theory of aligning labour laws with the needs of the economy. The note asked if this meant justification of ? non payment of the statutory minimum wages ? forcing the workers to work 12 hours a day ? denying them social security benefits under PF, ESI etc ? deploying workers on contract basis continuously in jobs of permanent and perennial nature ? not maintaining statutorily required employment registers ? not submitting returns required under law ? not giving appointment letters to the workers ? denial of the right to organise and collective bargaining If so, it can never agree to such alignment. It also strongly asserted that there is no need for a separate labour law for the micro, small and medium enterprises sector at this stage and that the requirements of this sector can be adequately addressed by the existing labour laws and procedures. On Measures to improve employment and employability ? The state must take the responsibility of providing training; the aim of skill development should be to increase full scale employment opportunities for youth and workers and not for merely meeting the requirements of the industrialists to earn profits ? Any idea to make the National Council of Vocational Training (NCTV) autonomous with reduced number of government nominees in the board should be rejected ? The serious staff shortage for inspection of ITIs/ ITCs at the central and state level should be addressed immediately As a result of the prolonged struggles of the working class, at least some of its demands have thus found reflection in the agenda items and the recommendations of the 45th session of ILC. The extent to which the recommendations will be implemented by the government, as the experience with so many of the recommendations of all the past ILCs, depends on how strongly and consistently the struggles are continued by the working class by mobilising all the resources at its command. At the same time, it is also necessary to keep in mind that the implementation of even these limited recommendations requires the reversal of the neoliberal policy regime. Hence, the need of the hour is to ‘intensify struggles to change policies’, as the 14th conference of CITU has called for.

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Meeting senior comrades of LIC Union at Calicut

19 Sunday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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BSNLEU, Conference, LIEU

Today, I got the opportunity to meet some former senior leaders of the LIC Employees Union (AIIEA), with whom I had worked together when I was in Calicut before I shifted to Delhi in 1991, after being elected as the President of All India Telecom Employees Union Class III.

I was invited to inaugurate the 41st Divisional Conference of LIC Employees Union  being held at Calicut on 19-20 May 2013. I gladly accepted the same since it was a pleasure to meet our LIC comrades. I inaugurated the open session, which was also addressed by Coms. M.Kunhikrishnan, Vice-President, AIIEA, Senthil Kumar, C.Achuthan,  K.K.C.Pillai, Ajayan and others. From BSNLEU Com. Surendran greeted the Conference. In my speech, among other issues, I mentioned about the close relation between the AIIEA and BSNLEU all these years.

In the Conference, I could meet veteran leaders of the LIC Employees Union and now office-bearers of the LIC  Pensioners Association, including Com. C.Achuthan, K.K.C.Pillai, Sukumaran Punnassery, Bhaskarsan and Kazmi. We spent some time remembering old times. We remembered coms. A.Kunhiraman Nair, M.T.Karthikeyan and K.C.Prabhakran who are no more.

I met the new young leaders Coms. Biju and krishnan and also many comrades who were in LIC earlier.

A nice day indeed.

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Group fo Ministers on Trade Union Issues?

18 Saturday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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45 ILC

It is reported that a Group of Ministers (GoM) under the Chairmanship of Finance Minister, P.Chidambaram will be set up to look in to the issues raised by the Trade Unions.

It has become a method to solve issues by forming GoMs. Whether they are meeting or taking decisions are not known. It seems that there are  already more than 30 GoMs. Earlier, most of them were headed by Pranab Mukherjee. After he became President of India, P.Chidambaram is entrusted with maximum of GoMs.

Let us see how serious is the UPA Government on the issues of workers. So far, the experience has been far below average, nay negative.

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PM’s Speech – Words and Deeds

18 Saturday May 2013

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45 ILC, Labour Laws, PM

Prime Minister at 45th ILC:

“The recent two day strike by trade unions focussed on a number of issues relating to the welfare of not only of the working classes,but also the people at large. These include demands on which there can be no disagreement”.

Com.A.K.Padmanabhan, President, CITU:

” These are nice words before elections. He is talking about social security, but who was preventing them from implementing them for the last nine years. Except the RSBY, all other things, including Rs. 1,000 minimum pension or Rs.10,000 minimum wage have not been implemented”.

Even what the government has decided, that is not being implemented even in BSNL, a PSU and despite bringing it to the notice of the Management and een Communications Minister, no action is being taken to get them implemented.

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45th ILC – Prime Minister’s speech

17 Friday May 2013

Posted by VAN NAMBOODIRI in TU News - India

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ILC, PM Speech, TU

New Delhi, May 17 : Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today said the government was serious about the issues raised by trade unions during the recent general strike as there could be “no disagreement” on some of them and that it was willing to engage “constructively” with the workers’ bodies.
He said that while some demands such as containing inflation and generation of employment opportunities were “unexceptionable”, the government was already at an advanced stage for considering an universal social security cover for workers in both organised and unorganised sectors.
“Our government has paid very serious attention to the issues that trade unions have raised from time to time. The recent two-day strike by trade unions focused on a number of issues relating to the welfare not only of the working classes but also the people at large,” Singh said inaugurating the 45th session of Indian Labour Conference here.
These include demands on which there could be no disagreement such as demands for concrete measures for containing inflation, for generation of employment opportunities, for strict implementation of labour laws were unexceptionable, he said.
“There can, however, be differences on the best ways of fulfilling these demands and we are willing to engage constructively with the trade unions in this regard,” the Prime Minister said.
He said the government was also considering fixing a national floor-level minimum wage and provision of minimum pension of Rs. 1000 per month under the Employees’ Pension Scheme.
The Prime Minister was confident that “soon we will see some forward movement” on some other issues which require further dialogue, for which the government has set up a Group of Ministers under the Finance Minister.
Noting that the economy was going through difficult circumstances and “our growth is not what we would like it to be”, he sought enhanced partnership among the industry, trade unions and state governments to strengthen the economy and the society.
“Even as the government works for reversing this situation (the economic slowdown) and I am confident we can do so and we will do it, we need the cooperation of both captains of industry and our trade unions,” he said.The Prime Minister said the demands of the trade unions, during their two-day general strike in February this year, reflected the concern that growth and progress should be inclusive and should particularly benefit the under-privileged sections of the society.
“This is a concern that has been very dear to our government. We believe that providing our people with productive employment opportunities is the best way of achieving this objective,” he said.
Singh said ever since the UPA government came to power in 2004, it has endeavoured to work for the welfare of workers and has delivered on the promises, even though much more needs to be done.
“When I look back at what I had said when I addressed the 40th Session of this Conference in 2005, I feel a sense of satisfaction that we have delivered substantially on the promises we had made at that time.
“I am happy that we have achieved good results in these areas, though I would be the first one to recognise that there is much that still needs to be done,” he said.
The Prime Minister said that despite the global meltdown, the government created 20 million additional job opportunities during the period between 2004-05 and 2009-10, leading to a drop in the employment rate from 8.3 per cent to 6.6 per cent.
Employment in the organised sector also registered a growth of more than 9 per cent from 26.5 million in 2005 to 29 million in 2011.
“It is heartening to note that women employment in the organised sector has also registered a growth of about 19 per cent during the same period,” he said.
Singh also focused on the government’s move to skill 5 crore people by the end of the 12th Five Year Plan, stating that this will not only help in generating good quality employment but will also provide industry with the skilled workforce they need to expand and modernise their operations.
Talking about the government’s recent decision to set up the National Skill Development Agency (NSDA), he said it would anchor and operationalise the national skills qualification framework thereby playing a vital role in the quality of the training in the country. (PTI)

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