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Tamil Nadu sackings signal new offensive against Indian workers
By Ganesh Dev and K. Ratnayake
3 September 2003
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The sacking of nearly 200,000 striking government workers in
the Indian state of Tamil Nadu in early July has rapidly become
the basis for a wholesale offensive against the democratic rights
and social position of the working class throughout the country.
This unprecedented attack has been upheld by the Tamil Nadu High
Court and the Indian Supreme Court, widely hailed as a model by
big business and in the media, and backed by the Bharatiya Janatha
Party (BJP)-led government in New Delhi.
The strike itself was the product of resistance by government
workers to the erosion of pensions and other rights by the All
India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhakam (AIADMK) state government.
Workers lost benefits worth between 90,000 rupees ($US1,960) and
125,000 rupees as a result of cutbacks over the past two years,
provoking a series of strikes and protests.
In response to the growing militancy of government workers,
the Tamil Nadu government pushed through the draconian Essential
Services Maintenance Act (ESMA) in May last year, which
provided for virtually any section of the public sector to be
nominated as essential and subject to no-strike clauses.
Finance Minister C. Ponnaiyan declared at the time that the legislation
was necessary for enforcing discipline and improving
the economic conditions of the state.
In March 2003, the Joint Action Council of Teachers Organisations
and Government Employees Organisations (JACTO-GEO) was compelled
to call a token strike against the state governments cuts
to superannuation benefits. The Confederation of Teachers Associations
and Government Employees Associations (COTA-GEO) called for a
mass hunger strike on the same day.
Confronted with widespread anger among their members, the unions
called for an indefinite strike on July 2 to fight for a series
of 15 demandsthe main ones relating to the restoration of
pensions and other benefits. Two days before the strike, the state
government attempted to preempt it by arresting hundreds of union
leaders and officials. The detentions and police harassment continued
over the next two days, provoking protest walkouts and strikes
in the state capital of Madras.
Far from intimidating workers, the governments actions
resulted in an overwhelming response to the strike call. An estimated
90 percent of the public sector workforce, or more than a million
workers, stopped work on July 2. Clearly shaken by the turnout,
Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalithaa rammed through an emergency
amendment to the ESMA on July 4 providing her with retrospective
powers to dismiss strikers and to impose substantial fines and
jail terms on anyone found guilty of striking or instigating a
strike.
Over the next few days, almost 200,000 workers were summarily
sacked in the largest mass dismissal in Indian history. Workers
not only lost their jobs but, in many cases their housing as well.
To fill the positions, Jayalalithaa began to hire thousands of
strikebreakers on short-term contractsmany with close affiliations
to the ruling AIADMK. At the same time, police continued to make
arrests.
Despite the enormity of the attack on basic democratic rights,
the trade unions and opposition parties, including the Communist
Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M), made no move to seek broader support
from the working class and directed the sacked employees into
a series of futile legal actions. On July 11, the Tamil Nadu High
Court dismissed legal petitions to overturn the sackings on the
grounds that the workers had not sought reinstatement through
the State Administrative Tribunala body consisting of one
judge already inundated with cases.
The High Court agreed to only one point of the petitions: the
release of those who had been arrested. Out of jail, the union
leaders promptly convened a meeting of the strike committee and
on July 12 unconditionally called off any further industrial action.
Union leader G. Suryamoorthy declared that the JACTO-GEO and COTA-GEO
had no intention of appealing the High Court decision, but would
give moral support to any workers who did.
With the strike ended and no broad campaign against the sackings,
the Indian Supreme Court seized on the opportunity to establish
a far-reaching precedent. On July 24, a panel of two judges declared
that employees did not have any fundamental right to strike and
that such illegal strikes had to be dealt with firmly by the authorities.
It suggested, but did not order, that the state government
reinstate the sacked workers, provided that they offered an unconditional
apology.
Following the reinstatement of some 165,000 workers, the Supreme
Court brought down its final judgment on August 6 which dismissed
the challenge to the ESMA law and declared that employees had
no fundamental, legal, moral or equitable right to
strike. In a 21-page ruling thoroughly permeated with hostility
to the working class, the judges declared: No political
party or organisation can claim a right to paralyse the economic
and industrial activities of a state or nation or inconvenience
citizens. After stating that strike action was mostly
misused, they suggested that, for redressing grievances,
employees should do more work honestly, diligently and efficiently
to impress their employer.
A new round of economic restructuring
The Tamil Nadu government immediately took the Supreme Court
ruling as a green light to intensify its offensive. On August
12, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa began steps to deregister 26 major
trade unions and another 200 affiliated unions. Recognition of
the JACTO and COTA federations was withdrawn. More than 6,000
dismissed workers accused of violence and instigating
others to strike have not been reinstated and are to be dragged
before a panel of three retired judges from the Madras High Court.
Big business has enthusiastically supported the state governments
actions. At the national council meeting of the Confederation
of Indian Industries (CII) held in Madras on July 25, some 70
CEOs from the major Indian corporations, including Ford India,
Tata and Hindustan Motors, showered praise on Jayalalithaa who
was their guest of honour.
CII President Anand Mahindra told the gathering: The
chief ministers uncommon firmness in the handling of the
government employees strike was an object lesson for industry.
Jayalalithaa in return urged the corporate chiefs to launch their
own campaign. It is a competitive world and the laggards
will have to rue their complacency. May I exhort you to reassess
your strategies, look for opportunities and strike boldly,
she said.
The corporate support for Jayalalithaa reflects concerns in
ruling circles that the pace of economic restructuring in India
has been too slow. In the 1990s, successive Congress and BJP government
launched a far-reaching program of economic reform to open up
the Indian economy to foreign investment, slash government spending
and privatise state-owned enterprises.
For some time, however, big business has been demanding the
implementation of the stalled second generation reforms.
The chief target of these measures are what remains of the public
sector, government subsidies and the limited legal barriers to
the exploitation of the working class. In particular, the program
includes a major overall of the countrys labour laws to
allow employers to hire and fire at willa measure that has
provoked widespread opposition among workers.
The corporate chiefs regard rights enjoyed by public sector
workers as a barrier to further cutting wages and conditions,
particularly for trained and educated employees. Only a small
and declining percentage of the Indian workforce enjoys a relatively
secure job, as salaried employees. According to a
Planning Commission report published last year, just 6.7 percent
were classified as salaried in 1999-2000 as compared to 37.3 percent
who were casual and the remaining 56 percent who were
self-employed.
The 6.7 percent represents about 28 million employees who work
in what is known as the organised sector. Of those,
the vast majorityjust under 69 percentare government
employees, many of whom are unionised. Despite the assaults of
the past decade, their wages and other benefits have largely remained
intact. Big business regards this as an intolerable impediment
both to the slashing of government spending and to making further
inroads into wages and conditions of the workforce as a whole.
Thus the effusive praise from big business and the media for
the Tamil Nadu government. A columnist in the Indian Express
praised Jayalalithaas eminently sensible act,
declaring that it has set the stage for other state governments
to react with swiftly and decisively against would-be strikers.
The reverberations have been felt in neighbouring Sri Lanka where
a Daily Mirror editorial, entitled Urgent surgery
for the strike cancer, pressed the government to outlaw
industrial action in the health sector.
The BJP-led government in New Delhi has indicated that it is
preparing to follow the lead taken by Jayalalithaa in Tamil Nadu.
Asked in parliament on August 19 if the government was preparing
a bill to ban strikes, junior home minister Harin Pathak stated
that it would use the prevailing conduct rules for
government employees to prohibit their strikes.
Trade union prostration
In the facing of this offensive against the working class,
the trade unions have demonstrated their complete prostration
to the powers that be. Sukomal Sen, general secretary of the All
India State Government Employers Federation (AISGEF) expressed
his deep concern and anguish over the chief ministers
actions and described the Supreme Court decision as most
unfortunate. But AISGEF, which is controlled by the CPI-M,
has no plans to mobilise workers in a campaign against these measures.
M.K. Pandhe, leader of the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU),
implied in an interview in the Indian magazine Frontline
that nothing much had changed and the actions of the Jayalalithaa
government were simply an isolated aberration. The implication
will be that strikes will take place in spite of the judgment,
which will be ignored, whatever the consequences, he said.
On July 25, the top national union leaders sat down with government
ministers and officials in New Delhi in a tripartite body known
as the Standing Labour Committee (SLC). When the labour minister
objected to their attempt to table a feeble resolution condemning
the sacking of government employees, the union bureaucrats lamely
agreed to just have it read out instead to avoid total disruption
of SLC agenda.
None of the opposition parties, including the CPI-M and the
Communist Party of India (CPI), have done anything more than issue
perfunctory condemnations of the sackings. Even the left-leaning
Frontline was compelled to note: Although [there
have been] newspaper statements issued by leaders of all hues,
there was little effort to make any united move. Even the left
parties regretted that they could organise an all party meeting
on July 19, more than a fortnight after the arrests and dismissals.
The mass sacking of workers in Tamil Nadu has exposed the thoroughly
rotten character of these parties and organisations, which have
all acquiesced or actively collaborated in the assault on the
social position of the working class over the last decade. In
the case of the CPI-M, it has been the leading party in ruling
left coalitions in the states of West Bengal and Kerala,
which have presided over economic restructuring measures.
Workers throughout the Indian subcontinent need to draw the
sharpest lessons from the bitter experiences in Tamil Nadu. The
starting point of any struggle to defend basic democratic rights,
including the right to strike, and living standards is a complete
political break from all those parties and organisations, including
the CPI and CPI-M, that have proven themselves to be appendages
of the existing capitalist order. To challenge the agenda of government
and big business requires a new program based on socialist and
internationalist principles that refuses to accept the right
of the privileged few to profit at the expense of the vast majority.
See Also:
Indian unions call off stoppage
after state government sacks 200,000 strikers
[17 July 2003]
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