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Sri Lankan plantation workers angry at unions and government
By our correspondents
23 December 2006
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The World Socialist Web Site spoke to striking plantation
workers in different areas in Sri Lanka over the past week as
their pay campaign was sabotaged and finally shut down altogether
by the leaderships of all the trade unions. The workers expressed
their anger and opposition to the role of the unions and the failure
of President Mahinda Rajapakse and his government to support their
demands.
The Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC) and its allied union, which
opposed the strike from the outset, signed a deal with employers
on Tuesday that was significantly less than the strikers
demand. The CWC leadership was only able to carry out this betrayal
because it had the tacit support of the United Peoples Front (UPF),
which had called the strike, but was increasingly concerned over
the looming confrontation with the Rajapakse government.
CWC leader Arumugam Thondaman and UPF leader Periyasamy Chandrasekaran
are both cabinet ministers. At a special cabinet meeting on December
15, Rajapakse called on the UPF to end the strike, which he claimed
was damaging the economy. Chandrasekaran convened a meeting of
union delegates in Hatton last Sunday but faced a barrage of opposition
from workers after deputy labour minister Mervin Silva argued
they should accept the employers offer.
The following day, Chandrasekaran wrote to the CWC leadership
encouraging them to take a valuable new approach in
opening up negotiations with employers. The resulting deal, which
Chandrasekaran hailed as a victory, fell well short
of the strike demand of a daily wage of 300 rupees ($US3). The
CWC signed a two-year agreement with a base rate of just 170 rupees,
together with a 90-rupee allowance conditional on attendance and
prices. Most workers will not receive the full allowance.
The other unions, including the All Ceylon Plantation Workers
Union (ACPWU) affiliated to the Sinhala chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi
Peramuna (JVP), have all fallen into line. On Monday, the JVP
declared it would call a general strike of its unions if the plantation
workers did not receive the full 300 rupees. By Wednesday, the
ACPWU leadership claimed that it had no choice but to call for
a return to work. No mention was made of a general strike.
Significantly, the two-week strike by a half-million plantation
workers involved significant layers of Sinhala workers as well
as Tamil-speaking workers who form the majority of the plantation
workforce. The response was all the more significant as it took
place as the Rajapakse government is whipping up anti-Tamil chauvinism
to justify plunging the country back to civil war.
The determination of strikers to pursue their campaign stands
in stark contrast to the opportunist manoeuvres of the union leaderships,
which back the government and its intensifying offensives against
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Far from defending
the rights of workers, the unions are the mechanism for imposing
Rajapakses demand for the working class to bear the burdens
of the war.
Such was the disgust and anger among workers at the agreement
signed on Tuesday, that many refused to return to work. The full
extent of this ongoing protest has not been widely reported. In
its news bulletin on Thursday, the government-owned ITN television
channel announced that half the work force turned up for work
on Wednesday and 80 percent on Thursday. The WSWS received reports
that several thousand workers in remote tea estates, such as in
the Bogawantalawa area, were not at work on Thursday.
Below are comments from plantation workers and their supporters
to the WSWS.
Several hundred Peradeniya university students staged a two
hour demonstration on December 14 in support of the striking workers.
Their slogans included: Pay the 300-rupee wage, The
trade unions are dead, Dont betray the workers
struggle and Workers are not slaves.

Up Country Student Union (UCSU) secretary R. Chandramohan
told the WSWS: This is the first campaign by students in
support of workers in recent times. We have no faith in the trade
unions. The CWC is already working to sabotage the wage struggle.
They have campaigned house-to-house urging workers to return to
work. We are already discussing how to get all the students involved
in this struggle.
Sunil Tennakoon, a Sinhala worker from Kegalle,
was among hundreds who attended last Sundays meeting organised
by the UPF for deputy labour minister Mervin Silva.
I came here representing workers from our area to hear
what the deputy minister of labour had to say. Neither the minister
nor the trade union leaders have told us concretely what they
are going to do about our wage demand. We are asking for a wage
rise to cope with the rising cost of living, but the deputy minister
is talking about sending us overseas to earn more. It is like
showing honeycomb to an amputated man [without hands]. Before
leaving, my co-workers told me not to accept anything less than
our demand.
We are in this struggle without any religious or racial
differences. But I heard that some thugs and ministerial bodyguards
are trying to create communal divisions by assaulting Tamil-speaking
workers and sabotaging our just struggle. [He was referring to
an incident at the Lavent estate at Yatiyantota where ministerial
employees attacked workers.]
For the past 20 years, whatever government was in power,
it carried out a war against our Tamil fellow citizens of this
country and spent a very large amount of money for no-ones
benefit. This money could have been used to improve welfare facilities
for all the people. I agree with your point that the workers of
this country and around the world should unite to change the system.
Devadas, from the Welioya estate, also attended
the Hatton meeting. I heard them saying that the companies
are complaining about losses. If that is the case, we should ask
the companies to leave the estates. We can run them.
If we fight for our rights, we are branded as supporters
of terrorists. I was arrested previously and detained for over
a year. Even now they might try to arrest me because I am leading
the strike in our area. That is the situation.
If the government can spend millions and millions of
rupees to wage a war that benefits neither Sinhalese nor any others,
why cant it think about our plight and spend the money for
the benefit of people?
Using the war [as a pretext], the government has passed
anti-terrorist laws, which are used against the workers. Now the
JVP is in favour of the PTA [Prevention of Terrorism Act] which
was re-imposed recently. This party has forgotten that the same
law was used against them [in 1987-1990].
Estate workers from the Bogawantalawa area did not return to
work on Wednesday or Thursday. Hundreds of workers from the Tientsen
estate tried to march into town on Wednesday to protest against
the agreement, but were blocked by police. Workers who spoke to
the WSWS on Thursday were deeply hostile to the trade unions and
declared that they were not going to pay their unions dues any
more.
Sathasivam from the Tientsen estate said:
The trade unions have cheated us. We oppose this collective
agreement but we are helpless. No one is repairing our houses
or the roads. If they make any repairs they deduct the expense
from our wages. Prices for basic items have reached intolerable
levels.
They [the unions] didnt ask us about our wage.
They decide something with the companies and impose it on us.
What is the meaning of being a member of these trade unions? They
think workers will bow to them like in the past. Now the situation
has changed. We should not allow them the cheat us again.
A young worker from the Tientsen estate said:
We got a pay increase of just 35 rupees. A kilo of sugar
is now 62 rupees. I have been a member of the CWC for a long time.
We pay them 45 rupees each month. But they didnt fight for
us.

They have signed the agreement for two years. Today a
kilo of flour is 42 rupees. What will it be in two years time?
Our people took part in this strike under difficult conditions,
selling a few bottles of milk and cow dung or doing casual work
to make ends meet. But these politicians never think about that.
They are just interesteed in their profits and privileges.
A group of workers from the Dunbar estate
were extremely angry at the unions sell-out. One of the
workers explained: They have only increased our basic salary
by 35 rupees, which is not enough for a kilo of rice or two coconuts.
Apart from that, by reaching this collective agreement, the trade
unions have mortgaged us for two years. Can you imagine what the
cost of living will be in the coming two years? [UPF leader] Chandrasekaran
says this is a victory for the workers. It is a lie. They told
us that they would settle the problem by talking to the president.
But the president has favoured the companies, not us.
We have been striking more than two weeks, holding demonstrations,
pickets and sit-in strikes, but we have not won our demands. We
voted for the [opposition] UNP and [Rajapakses] SLFP as
these trade union leaders asked us. From now on we will not vote
for any of these parties. As you say, the Rajapakse government
has again started the war and we have to bear the burden. We agree
with your demand that Sri Lankan forces should withdraw from the
north and east.
Suratalee, a worker from the Thalawakele Coombwood
estate and a mother of four, explained: I have been working
here for 13 years from the age of 15. My mother has been working
for about 35 years. But we have no prospect of a better life.
I do not have a house, despite asking management so many times.
Presently I live in a small hut made of mud adjoining my mothers
house. The roof is collapsing. On rainy days, water comes through
the holes in the roof and we go into my mothers house.

I complained about this to the CWC union but they told
me to speak to the manager. They dont care about our lives.
What they want is our membership dues. My nine-year-old daughter
cannot do her homework as there are no facilities in our house.
Next year, I will have to send my five-year-old daughter to school.
I did not have the 2,000 rupees needed to send her to the nursery.
We cannot live on our income. I need at least four packets
of milk powder for my baby. One packet is 210 rupees. We cannot
always eat. For lunch we make rotis [bread] from one kilo of flour.
After giving them to the children, I sometimes go to work in the
afternoon without eating. My husband sends small amounts of money
from the odd jobs he gets in Colombo.
Banda, a Sinhala worker from an estate near
Bandarawela, is an estate guard. Usually the guards do not strike,
but Banda explained that all 100 Sinhala workers at his estate
had joined the strike.
Our days wage is a shameful one, he said.
We have no faith in this government. I have three educated
sons, but they dont have jobs. Prices for all the essentials
are skyrocketing. This war is a crime. People are getting killed
on both sides. The JVP is campaigning for war and supporting the
government. A few years back, they also waged a war against the
people.
Rajendran and other workers at the Dambetenna
estate near Bandarawela did not return to work on Wednesday as
a protest against the unions betrayal. He said workers thought
they would be better off under Mahinda Chinthanaya, Rajapakses
program for the November 2005 presidential election]. But a 450-gram
loaf of bread was now more than 20 rupees, he said. The prices
of other basics had also gone up, and workers had no faith in
the government or the union leaders.
Bala, from the Nayabedde estate near Bandarawela,
said: We are only returning to work unwillingly. We will
not allow the trade union leaders to come here. We are planning
to ask a TV channel to come this weekend so we can explain our
plight and announce that we are resigning from the trade unions.
They collect 60 rupees a month from us.
The tin sheets on the roof of our line rooms are corroded.
We dont have proper water and electricity supplies. Some
lines [barracks] have no electricity. There are no proper steps
or paths. The government is doing nothing, plantation companies
are doing nothing.
During bad weather, we may finish our work at 2 p.m.
but we have to wait for another one or one and a half hours until
they collect the days tea leaf pickings.
Our children are suffering from malnutrition. We have
no facilities to send our children to school. The school here
has 13 teachers, but of those 8 are voluntary teachers. Voluntary
teachers only get an allowance from the fees of 30 rupees a month
for every child.
See Also:
Sri Lankan unions betray plantation workers
strike
[21 December 2006]
Strike by Sri Lankan plantation workers
at the crossroads
[19 December 2006]
Half a million Sri Lankan plantation
workers continue strike for higher pay
[14 December 2006]
A socialist perspective for striking
Sri Lankan plantation workers
[5 December 2006]
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