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Indian Stalinists pledge to stamp out further IT work disruptions
By Keith Jones
9 November 2005
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The Communist Party of India (Marxist), or CPM, has concluded
a weeks-long internal debate over strikes that disrupt information
technology (IT) and IT-enabled service (ITES) industries and over
the rights of workers in these rapidly expanding sectors of Indias
economy. Speaking to the press October 26, CPM leaders said that
their just concluded two-day Polit Bureau meeting had affirmed
that IT and ITES workers should have the right to form unions
and to bargain collectively, including in some instances the right
to strike.
This decision is a ruse and a sham. It is meant to obscure
the fact that the CPMthe principal component of the Left
Front, the parliamentary bloc that governs the state of West Bengal
and that sustains the minority United Progressive Alliance government
in power at the centerhas capitulated to the demands of
West Bengals IT and ITES companies that it ensure worker
protests do not again disrupt their operations.
The IT, call center and business processing bosses were outraged
when a one-day, all-India general strike sponsored by the Left
Front and allied unions resulted in demonstrations and protests
that shut down most of their facilities in West Bengal. Supporters
of the strike blockaded roads and refused to allow IT and ITES
personnel through, although the Left Front government had issued
them essential service stickers.
Eight days after the September 29 strike, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee,
the chief minister of West Bengal and a CPM Polit Bureau member,
went before the IT and ITES bosses to make amends. He told them
he shared their outrage and would ensure that they would face
no such disruptions in the future. According to press reports,
Bhattacharjee declared, This menace [of strikes and bandhs]
is known to me. I can assure you that the strongest action will
be taken against such perpetrators in the future. I will deal
with the matter at the administrative and political levels.
The chief minister then pledged to representatives of Wipro, Tata
Consultancy Services, PricewaterhouseCoopers and other IT and
ITES companies: As far as the IT and ITES companies are
concerned, I can say that they experienced the last strike on
September 29.
Its an encouraging sign to see the chief minister
taking such a proactive stand, Bikram Dasgupta, Globsyn
Technologies chairman, told reporters at the conclusion of the
meeting. Bhattacharjee has categorically
assured us that such events will not recur.
Bhattacharjees promise to uphold peoples
right to go to their workplaces on a bandh day is
in keeping with the Left Front governments concerted drive
to woo IT and ITES investment. Not only has the West Bengal government
offered IT and ITES companies tax and land concessions and waived
a raft of labour regulations, including restrictions on night
and holiday work; it has given IT and ITES companies the status
of a public utility, which makes it much more difficult
for workers to gain the legal right to strike and far easier for
the government to declare any job action illegal.
According to the Telegraph, Bhattacharjee touched
the collective chord of the company heads. His diatribe
against workers who dare to disrupt IT and ITES operations sparked
opposition, however, from within the CPM leadership, especially
from the CPM-aligned Center of Indian Trade Unions (CITU).
Relations between West Bengals Left Front government
and the CITU leadership have become increasingly strained as Bhattacharjee
and his ministers have demanded with every greater regularity
and shrillness that the unions curb worker militancy and as the
West Bengal government itself resorts with increasing frequency
to using contract labour.
In August, just before leaving on a trip to meet with potential
investors in Southeast Asia, Bhattacharjee declared, What
I am trying to do is to create an investment-friendly climate
in (West Bengal), not only in our speeches in chambers of commerce
but also in our actions. We face an image problem. We committed
mistakes in the 60s and 70s. Investors are still apprehensive
about us. Now we are trying to motivate workers and employees.
This is a very competitive world. Productivity and production
quality are not the responsibility of managements alone, even
workers have to share it. For me, it is perform or perish.
The CITU leadership fully supports the West Bengal governments
efforts to attract international capital. But it resents being
marginalized in government decision-making and finds itself under
pressure from a rank and file that is increasingly agitated by
the Indian bourgeoisies drive to gut labour standards and
restrictions on layoffs, plant closures and the contracting out
of work.
In any event, Bhattacharjees blatant intervention in
support of the IT and ITES bosses triggered a major spat within
the CPM leadership.
The decision of the Polit Bureau on the IT/ITES issue had a
double aim: to paper over these differences and to refurbish the
CPMs claim to be a champion of workers rights.
But two things make clear the real import of the CPM leaderships
decisionthat the Stalinists have capitulated to the adverse
business reaction to the September 29 strike and will henceforth
stamp out any attempt to disrupt West Bengals IT and ITES
sectors.
First, CPM leaders told the press that none other than Chief
Minister Bhattacharjee will have full power to determine how the
Polit Bureaus position will be applied in West Bengal.
Bhattacharjee has, of course, made his virulent opposition
to further disruptions of the IT and ITES sector crystal clear.
So anxious was he to distance himself from worker protests, he
made a show of going into his chief ministers office on
the day of the all-India strike and berated pickets, saying they
had no right to prevent people from going to work, after they
prevented his wife from reporting to her job at a private library.
Second, while saying that IT and ITES workers should have the
right to form unions, the Stalinist leaders emphasized their support
for Indias labor laws. Far from being the embodiment of
workers rights, these laws were designed by the British
colonial state and the bourgeois Indian National Congress so as
to circumscribe workers power, including limiting the right
to strike to specially defined periods, and to foster class collaboration
and the development of a labor bureaucracy.
The Polit Bureau, including West Bengal chief minister,
Mr. Buddhadeb Bhattacharaya, announced CPM General Secretary
Prakash Karat, unanimously asserted that employees
in the IT sector should have the right to form trade unions
and collective bargaining. But Karat then hastened to add,
Even in West Bengal, the IT sector falls under the public
utility service and the workers have to give a 15-day notice for
going on strike.
In explaining the CPM leaderships stand, Anil Biswas,
Polit Bureau member and the CPM state secretary for West Bengal,
said, The IT sector faces no threat in Bengal and IT companies
are always welcome. Asked whether future protest strikes
might disrupt IT operations, Biswas said, People have the
right to form unions in every service but the mode of protest
has to be decided in consultation with the government. In
other words, the government can rule strike action illegal.
The Polit Bureau further decided to prepare a document for
the next CPM Central Committee meeting that would identify core
services in the IT and ITES sectors in which strikes should be
forbidden.
Microsoft India Chairman Ravi Venkatesan deplored the CPM decision,
saying, It is not clear how the formation of unions will
help the IT sector.
But the meaning of the CPMs decision was not lost on
the New Indian Express, which itself responded to the September
29 all-India strike by urging the Indian government ban all strikes
and unions. In the first editorial of its October 28 on-line edition,
the New Indian Express declared, CPMs decision
on strikes in the IT sector was wise.... The CPM has done well
to leave the decision on strikes affecting the IT sector to the
West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee. It is also
fortunate that the West Bengal chief minister has won his battle
within the CPM on the issue.
The editorial concluded by urging the CPM to take the next
step and accept new restrictions on the right to strike in manufacturing
and other key economic sectors. The Times of India argued
in a similar vein: Left-ruled Bengal ... has now effectively
outlawed trade unions in the IT sector.... That has helped Bengal
... attract tech investments, create jobs and boost incomes through
the last three years.... If Bengals IT experience is any
indicator, unions ought to be outlawed in most fast-growing sectors
in India.
The CPM and the Left Front posture as defenders of the working
class and toilers. Yet they are propping up a Congress-led government
at the center that is intent on transforming India into a cheap
labor haven for world capital by destroying what few protections
and public services working people still enjoy. And to woo investors
to West Bengal, they are aiding and abetting big business
assault on the most elementary rights of workers.
See Also:
Leading Indian daily calls
for suppression of strikes and unions
[7 October 2005]
Sixty million Indian workers
strike against government economic policies
[4 October 2005]
One-day general strike in
India exposes need for socialist-internationalist
[29 September 2005]
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