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Lanka
Sri Lankan health unions call off two-day strike
By Ajitha Gunaratna
30 June 2004
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At the last minute, Sri Lankan health unions belonging to the
Health Services Trade Union Alliance (HSTUA) postponed a two-day
strike scheduled to start yesterday after Prime Minister Mahinda
Rajapakse promised to take action over their demands within two
weeks. Union leaders took the decision despite demonstrations
by health workers indicating their willingness to defy threats
by the United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government.
The HSTUAa federation of nearly 50 public health sector
unionscalled the two-day strike to press for a series of
demands including: the extension of a pay rise granted to central
government workers to those employed by provincial councils; a
wage increase for casual and substitute labourers; the back payment
of increases to 1997; and the granting of permanency to casual
and substitute workers. Union leaders declared their willingness
to fast until death to press the case.
The HSTUA mainly covers non-medical staff in the public health
system, including registered and assistant medical officers, clerks,
drivers, midwives, hospital attendants, substitute workers and
a section of nurses. Most are low-paid and have supported a lengthy
industrial campaign for decent wages. Last Tuesday around 80,000
health workers took sick leave and participated in a one-day stoppage
throughout the island. More than 10,000 health workers demonstrated
in front of the health ministry in Colombo for several hours to
voice their demands.
Desperate to prevent any escalation of strike action, Prime
Minister Rajapakse offered HSTUA leaders a series of vague promises
to call off this weeks stoppage. He agreed to a pay increase
for casual and substitute workers but asked for a two-week delay
to allow time to discuss pay increases with provincial councils.
Salary anomalies involving registered and assistant medical officers
will be referred to a salary commission.
The HSTUA decision has provided a crucial breathing space for
the UPFA, which faces six provincial council elections on July
10that is, in less than two weeks. The minority UPFA governmenta
coalition between President Chandrika Kumaratungas Sri Lanka
Freedom Party (SLFP) and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)has
been in power less than three months but faces rising opposition.
The health employees campaign is an expression of simmering
discontent among Sri Lankan workers over their deteriorating living
standards. The previous United National Front (UNF) government
lost the April 2 general election in part because of widespread
hostility to its Regaining Sri Lanka program of privatisation
and economic restructuring dictated by the IMF and World Bank.
The HSTUA has waged a protracted campaign for increased pay,
including a nationwide indefinite strike last September that lasted
for 13 days. At each point, however, the HSTUA bureaucrats have
accepted various government promises, which have invariably proved
to be empty. The UNF government was finally forced to grant a
pay hike of about 40 percent in installments in February, amid
a growing political crisis that eventually led to the governments
sacking by President Kumaratunga.
When the UNF agreed to the February wage increase, the HSTUA
told its members that everything had been settled. But within
weeks it emerged that about 40,000 provincial council workersnearly
half of all health sector employeeswould be denied the increase.
After protests took place, three councils paid the rise but the
other six refused, saying there was no money.
During the election campaign, the SLFP and the JVP exploited
the widespread discontent over falling living standards, using
populist demagogy and by making a series of promises to workers
and the poor. Health employees were told that all salary anomalies
would be rectified. But having come to power, the UPFA is under
pressure to continue economic restructuring and has already begun
to renege on its promises. The IMF, World Bank and other donors
are withholding $US4.5 billion in economic aid, pending peace
talks with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and agreement
on economic reforms.
The JVPs insidious role
Health workers confront a hostile government, which is determined
that the working class should bear the burden of the countrys
economic crisis. Along with the Colombo media, the JVP is playing
a particularly insidious role in attacking health workers for
daring to fight for decent pay and conditions. The JVP, which
at times claims falsely to be Marxist, is based on a mixture of
Sinhala chauvinism and populist rhetoric. Last year the JVP-led
All Ceylon Health Services Union (ACHSU) postured as the most
militant of unions in the HSTUA campaign. Now its leaders are
doing all they can to undermine a joint struggle.
Before last weeks one-day strike, ACHSU leaders R.M.W.
Ranasinghe and Samantha Koralearachchi met Health Minister Nimal
Siripala de Silva and deliberately distanced their union from
the HSTUA. In a press statement, they declared that the minister
promised to solve the demands and called on workers not to participate
in the protest action.
At several hospitals and health institutions, ACHSU officials
confronted tough opposition as they tried to prevent workers taking
part in the strike. At the Colombo South General Hospital last
week, they were forced to leave the meeting. One worker who was
present told the WSWS: The ACHSU changed its tune as soon
as their government came to office. Earlier they showed us a revolutionary
face. Now they have become real scabs.
On the day before the strike, JVP member Harindra Kuruppu,
the secretary of the Government Pharmacists Association (GPA),
appeared on TNL, a private television channel, to urge health
workers not to participate. He argued that the new government
should be given more time and accused the HSTUA leaders of including
fresh demands in their campaign. Despite his appeal, a majority
of the GPA members joined the protest.
The June issue of the JVPs trade union newspaper, Rathu
Lanka (Red Lanka), published a vicious attack on the working
class as a whole. Entitled A trade union front to help the
UNP to return to power, the article declared that some unions
were involved in a secret plan to topple the government.
It identified the health and rail sector trade unions in particular.
[T]he operation (against the government) will be launched
in five stages, the article stated. The first step
has already been launched in the form of a media campaign. The
second step will identify the fields where they have influence,
inform the workers that salary increases have been scrapped and
instigate trade union struggles in those fields and spread disaffection
in the UPFA government.
The JVP is lining up directly with the Colombo media, which
has advocated the most repressive measures to smash the campaign
by health employees. A Daily Mirror editorial on June 23
denounced workers, stating: It might be necessary for the
government to even consider some action under the Public Security
Act, though some groups suggest the Prevention of Terrorism Act,
because some of these unions are acting in a manner that borders
on terrorising patients. The Island in its editorial
on June 22 cited the parlous state of the economy
and insisted that wildcat strikes in the state health sector
should be made illegal.
During last years indefinite strike, the UNF used army
troops in public hospitals as strikebreakers and arrested a number
of union leaders and militants. The JVPs comments and actions
are a sharp warning that the new UPFA government is prepared to
use similar, or even more draconian, measures to break the current
campaign.
The JVPs role in opposing industrial action by health
workers again underscores the anti-working class character of
this racialist organisation. In the late 1980s, JVP hit squads
killed scores of workers, trade unionists and political opponents
who refused to take part in its Sinhala chauvinist campaign against
the Indo-Lanka Accord. Now in government for the first time, the
JVP will not hesitate to use the most extreme measures to break
up opposition by workers and the poor as the UPFA presses ahead
with the economic reforms being demanded by big business and foreign
investors.
See Also:
Dengue outbreak in Sri Lanka highlights
deteriorating public health services
[16 June 2004]
LTTE joins government
strikebreaking against Sri Lankan health workers
[30 September 2003]
Military sent into
hospitals
Striking Sri Lankan health workers defy intimidation
[27 September 2003]
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