|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
Indian tea estate workers still on strike after six months
By K. Sundaram and Ganesh Dev
16 December 1999
Use
this version to print
More than 2,000 workers from the Manjolai Tea Estates in the
southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu have been on strike for more
than six months, defying police violence and management threats
of sackings to continue their campaign for improved working conditions
and backpay. The strikers make up 85 percent of the total workforce
on the Manjolai, Nalumuku and Oothu tea estates on the southern
tip of the Western Ghats mountain range in the Tirunelvelly district.
The strike has been led by the Pudhiya Tamizhagam (New Tamil
Nadu), a caste-based political party that is in alliance with
the Tamil Manila Congress, a regional breakaway party from the
traditional party of the Indian capitalist classthe Congress
(I). The Pudhiya Tamizhagam (PT) claims to represent a section
of the DalitsIndia's oppressed castes.
Last month PT leader, Dr. K. Krishnasamy, called on the Tamil
Nadu government to intervene in the dispute and buy the Manjolai
Estates after management threatened to sack the entire workforce
if they did not report for work by November 15.
On November 24, the state government's Joint Commissioner of
Labor held tripartite with the trade unions and management. The
talks broke down after the estate management insisted that they
would only take back permanent workersthe workforce is made
up of 1,600 permanent workers and 800 temporary workers. Further
negotiations took place on December 8 and are due to continue
this week.
The strikers are living in Arokiyanathapuram village near the
three estates and have survived on food provided by adjoining
villages. Each village has taken turns contributing two to three
sacks of rice, as well as dhal [lentils], to the common kitchen
that is feeding the workers and their families.
Work on the estates is being carried out by a handful of remaining
workers as well as managerial, supervisory and clerical staff
and 350 contract workers recruited after the strike began. The
three estates totaling 804 hectares belong to the Singampatti
Group, owned by the Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ltd, which
claims to have lost 1.5 million kilograms in tea production due
to the strike. The company calculates that the central Indian
government has lost 500,000 rupees in excise duty and the Tamil
Nadu government 3.2 million rupees in sales tax.
The dispute began in February after the union demanded that
management stick to the eight-hour day stipulated in the Labor
Act. The field work begins at 7.30am and ends at 4.30pm with an
hour for lunch at 12 noon. The plucked tea leaves are weighed
three times a dayat noon, then at 2.30pm and a final weighing
at 4.30pm. Since management refused to discuss an eight-hour day,
the union instructed workers to leave the fields at 3.30pm and
take their leaves for weighing. When management refused to weigh
the leaves, the workers simply left them at the weighing stations.
The management retaliated by deducting half a day's wages even
through workers had worked eight hours as stipulated by the Labor
Act. Workers' wages are 63 rupees or about $US1.50 a day. Each
day for three months, workers stopped work at 3.30pm, management
cut half of their wages and refused to negotiate on an eight-hour
day. The current strike finally erupted on May 29.
On June 7, all 1,600 workers650 men and 950 women as
well as 25 children and some retired workersmarched to the
Tirunelvelly collectorate [state and district government offices].
Police refused to allow the workers to meet government officials
and when they tried to enter the office, arrested 450 of the male
workers. They were remanded under "judicial custody"
and imprisoned 300 kilometres away in Trichy in southern Tamil
Nadu.
The following day, a demonstration led by women workers marched
to the district collector's office demanding the release of those
arrested. Again the police prevented the protestors from meeting
officials and arrested 200 women workers and 15 children who were
also jailed in Trichy.
On July 23, in what became known as the Manjolai massacre,
police brutally attacked a peaceful demonstration of Manjolai
workers, their families and supporters on their way to the collector's
office. Seventeen people died and about 500 were wounded when
police charged using tear gas and six-foot batons known as lathis,
deliberately forcing many of the crowd into the Tamaraparani River.
Some 18 to 20 are still missing including three women workers.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi immediately called
a press conference to defend the police, claiming that they had
been attacked by the demonstrating workers and in self defense
the police were forced to lathi charge the demonstrators. Those
who died drowned when they ran to escape the lathi charge and
tried to cross the river."
This claim has since been refuted conclusively by a committee
appointed by the People's Rights Association to investigate the
police attack. The committee visited the massacre site and spoke
to the families of the workers who were been killed or wounded.
The committee consisted of the former chief of the Tamil Nadu
police, V. Lashmana Narayanan; the former judge of the Bombay
High Court, H. Suresh; former Indian Administrative Service official,
V. Karupan; and former Vice Chancellor of Sundaranayar University,
Vasantha Devi.
In its report released on October 27, the committee concluded:
"The demonstration of the Manjolai workers on their problems
was peaceful... it was the lathi charge of the police, which was
the main reason for the deaths of the demonstrating workers. This
incident would not have happened if the district collector had
received the leaders of the demonstrators into his office and
received their memorandum to the government."
The conditions of Manjolai workers
Following the July police attack, the General Secretary of
the Human Rights Commission, Karthekeyan visited the Manjolai
estates and declared that he had found no bonded labour conditions
nor bonded labourers. But he agreed that what existed on the estates
were "slave conditions for the workers". Karthekeyan
is a former head of the CBI, the Indian counterpart to the US
FBI.
In India, the term bonded workers applies only
when workers and their families are unable to pay their debts
and become literally enslaved to money lenders or employers, sometimes
for generations. In the strict sense, the Manjolai workers are
not bonded labourers but they had little choice but to accept
the low pay and atrocious working and living conditions on the
estates.
Men and women workers work in the fields for nine hours a day.
The tea bushes are on the steep hillsides at an altitude of between
4,500 and 4,800 feet, subject at different times of the year to
heavy rains and sometimes snow. Workers pick under all conditions.
There are no toilets or shelters.
Workers leave their homes in the early morning, walking up
to seven kilometres to reach the roll muster point by 7.30am.
They are assigned their work for the daypicking, weeding,
spraying insecticide, etcand with an hour off for lunch,
work continuously until 4.30pm when they bring the tea leaves
to the weighing points. By the time they get back to their lines
it is 5.30 or 6pm.
Throughout the day, overseers supervise the workers. During
working hours, workers are not permitted to walk off to urinate.
The overseers even demand workers show them the spot where they
have urinated in order to check that the workers have not simply
been resting.
Estate workers live in so-called line roomslong,
roughly constructed, barrack-like huts divided into living areas
or rooms approximately 10 feet wide and 18 feet long.
On the Manjolai estates, each room, which is subdivided
into a verandah, living area and kitchen, houses three families.
Twelve or more people have to live, sleep and cook in an area
of 180 square feet.
It is such appalling living and working conditions that drove
workers to take strike action for more than four months at the
end of 1998, and to initiate the present strike.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |