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WSWS : News
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: India
Millions of Indian government employees to go on strike today
By Arun Kumar
24 February 2004
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More than 10 million employees of the central and state governments,
various publicly-owned companies, and Indias financial institutions
are expected to join a one-day national strike today, February
24, to protest against a Supreme Court ruling that public sector
workers have no right to strike.
The sweeping anti-worker ruling came in a dispute provoked
by the All-India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhakam (AIADMK) state
government of Tamil Nadu. When 200,000 Tamil Nadu employees launched
an indefinite strike last July 2 to demand the restoration of
pensions and other benefits unilaterally slashed by the state
government, Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalitha rushed through
emergency legislation outlawing the strike, then dismissed the
workers en masse and ordered the hiring of strikebreakers.
Unable to advance any other perspective to oppose the state
governments all-out attack, the unions terminated the strike
on July 12 and appealed to the Indian Supreme Court to reinstate
the sacked workers. A panel of the Supreme Court ruled on July
24 that the AIADMK government was well within its rights to strip
the workers of their right to strike and even to terminate them.
In what amounted to a diatribe against the unions, the panel claimed
government-worker strikes have had a ruinous impact on the public
and were neither a legal nor a moral right.
Having given sanction to Jayalalithas strikebreaking
and indeed encouraged other governments to similarly rob public
sector workers of their basic union rights, the Supreme Court
panel, in the interests of defusing an explosive situation, counselled
the government to reinstate most of the workers if they submitted
a humiliating written apology and accepted the contract rollbacks
imposed by the government.
Jayalalitha accepted the courts advice and soon was being
feted by Indias corporate elite for having delivered a body
blow to the working class.
The unions and the Stalinists partiesthe Communist Party
(CPI) and the Communist Part of India (Marxist)were, for
their part, stunned. It is now seven months since the Supreme
Court ruling, yet todays one-day strike is the first major
protest against it.
The principal demand raised by the union federations supporting
todays actionthe Center of Indian Trade Unions (CITU),
the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC), and the All India
Central Council of Trade Unions (AICCTU), respectively aligned
with the CPI (M), CPI, and the Maoist, Socialist Unity Centre
of Indiais that Indias right-wing, Hindu chauvinist-led
National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government take steps
to negate the impact of Supreme Courts observation on the
right to strike. The unions are also protesting against
that the NDA governments economic policies, which have led
to galloping unemployment, growing poverty, reckless privatization
and closures.
Plans for the day of protest predated the NDAs decision
to dissolve parliament and seek re-election eight months ahead
of schedule. But the Stalinists will no doubt use todays
strike to try to refurbish their tattered left credentials, the
better to promote their electoral understanding with the Congress,
the traditional governing party of the India bourgeoisie and a
proponent of capitalist globalization with a human face.
Given that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is the dominant
party in the NDA coalition, it is hardly surprising that the bank
union affiliated to the BJP, through their joint patronage by
the Hindu supremacist RSS, has condemned the strike as politically
motivated and is urging its members not to take part.
The Congress Party-affiliated Indian National Trade Union Congress
(INTUC) backed out from the strike and issued a statement that,
echoing the Supreme Court, denounced irresponsible trade
union actions for doing damage to the working
class and the economic growth of the country.
Significantly, the workers most directly impacted by the Supreme
Court decisionthe Tamil Nadu government employeeswill
not participate in todays national strike. No doubt for
fear of government reprisals, they are being asked only to join
in evening rallies. Since the defeat of last Julys strike,
the AIADMK government has continued its attack on the public sector
workers, imposing cuts in holidays and other working conditions.
Last summers Supreme Court judgment marked a new stage
in the drive of Indias corporate and political elite to
make the country a magnet for foreign investment by gutting basic
worker rights. By stripping public sector workers of the right
to strike, the Indian ruling class is both seeking to crush resistance
to the privatization of public services and government-owned enterprises
and to demonstrate to foreign capital that it is intent on radically
changing Indias labor regime. The crux of the second
stage of reforms initiated by the NDA government and whose
speedy implementation is demanded by big business is the dismantling
of restrictions on layoffs, closures and the use of contract labor.
See Also:
India: Tamil Nadu government
continues witchhunt of strikers
[9 January 2004]
India: Tamil Nadu
government launches far-reaching attack on the press
[20 November 2003]
Tamil Nadu sackings
signal new offensive against Indian workers
[3 September 2003]
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