Com. Bachan Mahopatra, RCWU Secretary expired after accident while returning from Maha Padav.

We have been informed that Com. Bachan Mohapatra, RCWU Secretary, Rourkala died in an accident at Pendra Railway Station, while returning from the 3 days Mahapadav at New Delhi from 9th to 11th November 2017.
Com.Mustafa, BSNL Contract worker from Karnataka, expired at Delhi Railway Station due to severe heart attack while returing from Maha Padav. .

We pay our respect and express our deep anguish at the sad incidents. We convey our geartfelt condolences to the families, friends and comrades of the deceased.They laid their lives while fighting for the workers’ cause.

WFTU solidarity statement on the three days’ mass action in India

WFTU solidarity statement on the three days’ mass action in India
09 Nov 2017ASIA, INDIA
A huge countrywide three-days’ mass action against the anti-worker, anti-people and anti-national policies of the government has started at the Parliament in the National Capital of India.
The protest is organized by the Joint Platform of Central Trade Unions, comprising Central Trade Union Organizations and all major industry/establishment wise federations and tens of thousands of militant workers are attending the demonstration from every corner of India.

The Joint Trade Union Platform represents workers and employees from all major sectors of industries and services viz., coal, steel, transport, telecom, petroleum, electricity, port & docks, engineering, construction, scheme-workers etc and employees of Central government and state government, Railways, banks, insurance, defense production, etc.

This protest is intended to demand the government to concede the unanimous demands which the joint trade union movement has been raising since the last over eight years. It is a step towards preparation for the next higher phase of united struggles including indefinite countrywide strike action, if the government continues to ignore the demands of the workers and proceed with its pro corporate agenda.

The World Federation of Trade Unions and its 92 million workers in the 5 continents join their voices with the Indian working class and its militant struggle against the anti-labour policies of the government and the bourgeois class their country. We express our support and solidarity to the class-oriented trade union movement of India and we want to affirm that will stand on their side for the fully acceptance and implementation of their fair demands in favor of the popular strata and the ordinary people.

The Secretariat

WHY THE BIG MEDIA BLACKED OUT THE MASSIVE WORKERS MAHAPADEV ?

 

NEW DELHI: They came in the thousands. They came from all over India. They came to demand their rights. They were in Delhi for three days.
They were the workers of India, the mazdoors, the oppressed labour. Amongst them were hundreds of women, as vocal, as aware of their rights as the men. They came in protest against the anti-

worker policies of the current government, to raise an united voice, to demand their rights.

They were blacked out by the big media. Not a word appeared on television channels, in the major newspapers, about this huge protest in the heart of the national capital. It was as if it did not happen where the media was concerned, redefining news in its desire to please the corporate and political bosses.

Is this not news:
The workers come in the way of this corporate-political nexus. This is the first reason why the huge rally that continued for three days, with the workers drawn from all segments of life—industrial, agrarian, mining—giving an insight into the India that seems to have been factored out of the headlines of the corporate driven media. Both suspicious and fearful of the organised trade union movement, with the massive mobilisation by the Left parties in particular, adding to the rich and powerful paranoia.

Media houses and corporate houses worked to destroy the trade unions in newspapers through the 19980-1990’s to ensure that the press workers and the working journalists were contained and controlled. Television ensured a crippling blow with contracts favouring the management replacing the daily wage board pay scales. And as the trade unions disappeared one by one in the newspaper industry , the management control over the workers intensified, with even editors now hired and fired at will with merit and capability hardly being the qualification.

Second, the workers are seen as anti-employers. Their demands thus increase the pressure on the business houses, and the governments that are resistant to conceding what the poor of India need and want. For instance on the last day Parliament street had turned into a sea of women asking for better wages, health and education care, all pretty low on the list of those who are in government and those who control government. Hence the media, that works under the employers, decided not to give space to over a lakh of workers and their demands.As pressure makes the ‘employers’ uncomfortable and thus is has become the duty of the owned and subservient media to ensure that comfort levels are not damaged.

Wages was a major issue. No revision of wages, low wages, undue cut of wages, and various methods used to ensure that the workers do not get what is their due.

“Jo hamse takrayega, choor choor ho jayega” shouted the workers as their leaders told the handful of reporters who were there representing alternative media that the central employees felt cheated, betrayed, over the 7th Planning Commission. They spoke of how work had increased manifold, wages had not, as government jobs were not filled and vacancies continued. There has been no wage revisions for instance of postal employees working in the rural areas, no confirmations, no revision. Trade union facilities are being withdrawn instead, and the government-corporate nexus is working in unison to marginalise the workers.

Those who own the newspapers too feel vulnerable against workers unity, and hence are at one with the nexus to black out the poor of India.

Three, workers are India’s toiling masses from coal mines, to anganwadis, to landless labour. They are not the consumer class, and bring no direct benefit to the advertising and TRP linked revenues of the big media. Giving them even a passing mention is thus worthless, as it brings no money and instead for the reasons cited above actually cuts into the revenue with the workers demanding a fair slice of the growth pie. By giving them space the big media does not want to justify or highlight their cause. Somehow the ostrich like approach has replaced conscientious and fair reportage, a belief that if the media ignores an event and buries its head in the sand, it will pass.

But as the workers said without hesitation, they have no respect left for the media. “Who cares whether they report or do not, your reporters are just bought by big money,” a woman from ASHA said smiling through the apparent belligerence. There was not a single voice that spoke of the media with any level of regret saying instead, “why should we bother, you are not going to write about us here or in our work place, you are not interested but the people’s voice cannot be stopped. A trade union leader pointed out, “we were here a few years ago, over a lakh of workers right outside Parliament but your media did not even notice us.”

From The CITIZEN

Com.Mustafa, contract worker from Karnataka passed away at Delhi.

With extreme sorrow and pain, it is intimated that Com.Mustafa (37),  BSNL contract labour from Bidar, Karnataka,  who had come to Delhi to attend the Maha Dharna called by the central trade Unions, passed away due to heart attack at the New Delhi railway station at about 2000 hours on 11th November 2017. He was to return after participating in the Dharna.

BSNLEU and BSNLCCWF leaders at New Delhi are making all arrangements for taking the body to his native place.

We convey our deep sorrow and heartfelt condolences to the bereaved family, friends and comrades!

National Telecom Policy (NTP) by 2018 February – Communications Minister

The Press Report released by Communications ministry is given below. According to this, the Government will finalize the New Telecom Policy -2018 by February 2018. NTP (1994)and NTP (1999)have both granted increased favours to the private companies and discriminated BSNL. It is certain that the NTP -2018 will not be different, especially since all the private telcos are demanding for more and more more concessions after the entry of Reliance Jio.

NEW DELHI, NOVEMBER 7:
The Telecom Ministry hopes to finalise the new national telecom policy by February 2018. It is planning to seek public comments by December-end.

Addressing mediapersons here, Telecom Minister Manoj Sinha also said the BharatNet project is going on at a faster pace, and firms such as Airtel, Reliance Jio and Vodafone are ready to provide services to rural areas. Under BharatNet, the Centre plans to provide broadband connectivity to 2.5 lakh gram panchayats (GPs).

“Telecom services providers have come forward for utilising BharatNet connectivity. Airtel has shown interest in 10,000 GPs for taking 1 Gbps connectivity on lease, while Reliance Jio, Vodafone and Idea are interested in taking 100 Mbps connectivity on lease in about 30,000, 2,000 and 1,000 GPs, respectively,” Sinha said.

“The rolling out of services by TSPs in these GPs is expected to trigger the village-level ecosystem, thereby widening the extent to cover more number of GPs in near future. This will give an impetus to broadband facilities in rural India.”

Sinha said that as of November 5, optical fibre cable connectivity has been achieved in 1,03,275 GPs by laying fibre for 2,38,677 km. GPON (Gigabit-capable Passive Optical Networks) equipment have been installed in 85,506 GPs, and 75,082 GPs are services ready.

For asymmetrical bandwidth between blocks and GPs, the charges per annum varies from ₹700 per Mbps for up to 10Mbps to ₹200 per Mbps for 1 Gbps. However, for symmetrical bandwidth between blocks and GPs, annual charges have been prescribed as ₹1,000 per Mbps up to 10Mbps, and ₹500 per Mbps for 100 Mbps. Tariff for any intermediate bandwidth will be calculated on pro-rata basis.

Release of Book “P and T Trade Union Movement” by Com. Tapan Sen, M.P., GS CITU

Tags

” The P and T Trade Union Movement” written by V.A.N.Namboodiri and published by NFPE was released on 6th August 2017 by Com. Tapan Sen,M.P.., General Secretary, CITU at the All India Conference of AIPEU Class III at Bengaluru. Com.M.Krishnan, Secretary General Confederation of  CG Employees and Workers, Com. R.N.Parashar, Secretary General NFPE, Com.C.C.Pillai former SG NFPE, Com.K.Rahavendran, former SG NFPE, Com.K.V.Sreedharan, former GS P.III and  other all India leaders were present. The book is having a forward by Com. A.K.Padmanabhan, Vice-President, CITU.

The book contains the history of the P and T Trade Union movement since 1900, the formation of the various unions, formation of UPTW, NFPTE as also the detailed report on the historical strikes of 1908, 1919, 1946, 1960, 1974, 1984 etc. and upto the bifurcation of the Department in to Postal and Telecom and the consequent bifurcation of NFPTE in to NFPE and NFTE.

Mighty Protest Demonstration on the anniversary of Demonetisation /Note ban

The anger of the common people, workers, kisan and other toiling people expressed itself in the Protest Day organised on 8th November 2017, the first anniversary of the demonetisation / note ban, which created miseries and imposed serious hardships to them. 30 persons died while standing in the queue for hours for getting some money from the ATMs. The small business has seriously suffered. The GDP has gone down drastically. The people were running here and there to get a few notes for their day to day expenditure.

None of the great aims of note ban was not implemented as the note ban like confiscating black money, containing terrorism  could be achieved.

The Central Government should apologise to the people for Tuglak like action taken by the government, creating a lot of difficulties to the people.

AIBDPA Comrades participated in the Maha Dharna at Dlhi

A large number of AIBDPA comrades from the nearby states participated in the Maha Dharna at the Parliament Street today, 10th November 2017, supporting the 12 demands raised by the 10 Central trade Unions. This was as per the call of the AIBDPA CHQ. They came from Haryana, Punjab, UP (E), U>P(West), Rajasthan and other states.  The BSNL pensioners have always stood with the fighting BSNL and other workers for their fully justified demands. It was only a few days back that thousands of BSNL DOT Pensioners participated in the Dharna organised by NCCPA in front of megh Doot Bhawan, New Delhi.

AIBDPA comrades will be participating in the Human Chain being organised by All Unions and Associations of BSNL on 16th November demanding wage revision.

October Revolution Day Celebrations.

World over Communist Parties celebrated the 100th anniversary of historic October revolution of 1917, resulting in the formation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Though USSR has collapsed, it was celebrated in a big way in Russia also. Delegates from many countries participated, including India in the celebration.

In India also, October revolution was organised in many centres.

Mahapadav in Delhi

 

The three day Maha Dharna being organised on 9-11 November 2017 against the wrong policies of the government and on a 12 point Charter of Demands by the ten national trade union centres and federations of central/state government employees, PSU unions etc. has started on 9th with massive participation. Lakhs of workers with their own union flags are participating in the dharna, coming from all parts of the country. I could participate in the same on 9th instant. A brief report on the same is given below:

The thousands of workers who stormed the national capital and assembled at Parliament Street in the national capital Delhi, to participate in the first day of the three days ‘mahapadav’ on 9th November 2017 enthusiastically endorsed the call of the speakers to intensify the struggle against the anti worker, anti people and anti national policies of the BJP led government and prepare for a countrywide indefinite general strike if the government fails to concede their demands.

Workers from all over the country representing many sector – public and private, permanent employees and contract, casual workers, state and central government employees, banks, insurance, telecom, railways, defence, and the various schemes of the government of India participated in the ‘mahapadav’ on the first day.

Ashok Singh (INTUC), Gurudas Dasgupta (AITUC), HS Sidhu (HMS), Tapan Sen (CITU), Satyawan (AIUTUC), G Devarajan (TUCC), Manali (SEWA), Rajiv Dimri (AICCTU), M Shanmugam (LPF) and Ashok Ghosh (UTUC) addressed the gathering in the first session presided over by Sanjay Singh (INTUC), Ramendra Kumar (AITUC), Raja Sridhar (HMS), Hemalata (CITU), RK Sharma (AIUTUC), Naren Chatterjee (TUCC), Sonia (SEWA), Santosh Rai (AICCTU), Subbaraman (LPF) and Shatrujit Singh (UTUC).

Leaders of the federations spoke in the second part of the first session. It was most significant that the leaders of the two major national federations of the railway employees – Shiv Gopal Mishra, general secretary of All India Railwaysmen’s Federation and Raghavaiagh, general secretary of National Federation of Indian Railwaymen – have announced that they would join the indefinite strike whenever the joint trade union platform gave the call. Leaders of several other all Industrial federations including Venkatachalam, general secretary of All India Bank Employees’ Association, Subhash Lamba, additional general secretary of All India State Government Employees’ Association and secretary of Electricity Employees’ Federation of India, KK Divakaran, general secretary of All India Road Transport Workers’ Federation, C Sreekumar, general secretary of All India Defence Employees’ Federation, Jagdeesh Sreemali, VS Dahiya, GR Shiv Shankar, Ravi Sen, Peelimuthu, Kalyan Sengupta, also joined them in endorsing the call addressed the huge gathering and announced they would join the indefinite country wide general strike whenever the joint trade union platform took the decision. Thampan Thomas (HMS), Vijay Pal Singh (AIUTUC), Anil Sharma (TUCC), Sonia (SEWA), Mahendra Parida (AICCTU), Natarajan (LPF) and Thomas Joseph (UTUC) also addressed