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Lanka
A socialist perspective for striking Sri Lankan plantation
workers
By the Socialist Equality Party (Sri Lanka)
5 December 2006
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Sri Lankan workers in the tea and rubber plantations are due
to begin an indefinite strike today to demand an increase in their
daily wage to just 300 rupees ($US3). The strike follows a two-week
go slow campaign and a series of demonstrations in
towns such as Nuwara Eliya, Thalawakele, Bogawanthalawa and within
individual plantations.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) warns that the campaign
for a wage rise involves not simply a struggle against plantation
owners and managers, but also against the government. The response
of President Mahinda Rajapakse to growing protests of workers
over pay, conditions and jobs has been to stir up communal divisions,
escalate the war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) and demand that workers bear the burden.
In the fight for improved pay and conditions, workers must
reject calls for sacrifice for the war and for business
profits. Sinhalese and Tamil plantation workers have joined together
to fight for their common class interests and should turn to workers
in other industries confronting the same problems of deteriorating
wages and conditions. A unified campaign is needed based on socialist
policies.
The trade union leaders are adamantly opposed to such a perspective.
The two main plantation unionsCeylon Workers Congress (CWC)
and the Up-country Peoples Front (UPF)also function as political
parties and are part of Rajapakses ruling coalition. CWC
leader Arumugam Thondaman and UPF leader Periyasamy Chandrasekharan
are cabinet ministers in a government that is prosecuting a communal
war and implementing IMF-dictated restructuring measures.
From the outset, the aim of the UPF and CWC has been to limit
the wage campaign so as to prevent a political confrontation with
the Rajapakse government.
The previous two-year wage agreement expired in June. In 2004
all plantation trade unions signed off on a deal that limited
the daily wage to just 135 rupees plus a 60-rupee allowance. The
allowance was tied to attendance, workload and prices, ensuring
that many workers did not receive the full 195 rupees, even on
the days they were able to work.
The CWC, along with the Lanka Jathika Estate Workers Union
(LJEWU) and several smaller unions, has already sabotaged a unified
strike by withdrawing from the campaign last Friday. CWC leader
Thondaman told a press conference that his union has already dropped
its demand to 270 rupees and indicated his willingness to compromise
further in talks with employers.
CWC parliamentarian V. Puthrasingamany blunted declared that
his union was more concerned about the solvency of the industrythat
is with company profitsthan with the deteriorating living
standards of union members. He railed against the strike sabotaging
the smooth running of the plantation sector, declaring: We
think that the sustainability of the industry is essential for
the survival of the workers.
Well aware of the resentment and anger of workers over falling
living standards, the UPF, Workers Liberation Front and other
trade unions are proceeding with the strike. But these unions,
like the CWC, have already indicated their willingness to cut
a deal with employers. UPF leader Chandrasekaran announced that
union leaders would seek President Rajapakses help to obtain
an equitable agreement.
However, Rajapakse has made clear his hostility to any pay
rise. He has warned workers that they have to fulfill their responsibilities
before speaking about rights. Three weeks ago, the
president brought down a budget that ruled out any significant
wage rise for public sector workers. He has already activated
essential services provisions that allow him to ban industrial
action in private and public sectors.
The CWC and UPF are trying to dupe workers, as they have for
years. The two unions have opportunistically joined one government
after another, claiming this would help the countrys 500,000
plantation workers. Instead, the CWC and UPF have played the key
role in stifling and suppressing any independent struggle, even
as pay and conditions have deteriorated and jobs have been destroyed.
Plantation workers are among the lowest paid and most oppressed
sections of the Sri Lankan working class. They live in semi-serfdom
with every aspect of their lives revolving around the plantationfrom
the barrack-style accommodation to the provision of education
and health services. The unions have collaborated with governments
and employers to maintain the sustainability of the
tea and rubber plantations by further eroding the living standards
of workers.
The real wage index for agricultural workers, which was 100
in 1978 and 98 in 2003, fell to 90.2 in early 2005 and plummetted
to 86.2 by December 2005. With the inflation rate sharply rising
to 12 percent this year due to the war and rising fuel prices,
the real wages of plantation workers have fallen even further.
For plantation workers living on the brink, the erosion of their
pay, along with rising levels of unemployment, has been a disaster.
The plantation companies, whose exports jumped from 67 billion
rupees last year to 75 billion rupees up to October, invariably
respond by saying that Sri Lankan products have to be internationally
competitive. The government and employers warn that Sri
Lankan tea has already lost its leading position in world markets
to Kenya. And the unions fall into line.
Plantation workers must have their own international strategy:
to turn to estate workers in China, India and Africa to initiate
a joint offensive for decent pay and living standards.
The Socialist Equality Party calls on workers to reject the
bogus campaign being conducted by the CWC, UPF and other trade
unions and to initiate a broad struggle for the following demands:
* Put an end to the daily wage system. Estate workers must
be guaranteed a monthly wage of at least 15,000 rupees for a 40-hour
week, automatically indexed to inflation. Sick leave, pensions
and additional payment for any overtime have to be included in
any agreement.
* Proper accommodation, education and health care. The appalling
housing of plantation workers has to be upgraded or replaced completely
by new accommodation with essentials such as running water and
electricity. The demand for decent living conditions must be part
of a socialist program to refashion society as a whole based on
the needs of the majority, rather than the profits of the wealthy
few.
* Oppose the war and defend democratic rights. The Rajapakse
government has deliberately stirred up communal hatreds and escalated
the war as a means of dividing workers against one another. We
say not another man, not another rupee for this racialist war.
The SEP calls for the rejection of all forms of nationalism and
racism and demands the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of all security forces from the north and east.
A unified struggle of the working classSinhala, Tamil
and Muslimis needed to fight for a Socialist Republic of
Sri Lanka and Eelam as part of the broader struggle for a Union
of Socialist Republics of South Asia and internationally.
We urge plantation workers to seriously consider this program
and to regularly read the World Socialist Web Site published
by the SEP and its sister parties around the world. Above all
we call on working people and youth to join and build the SEP
as the mass working class party needed to fight for this perspective.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government brings down a war
budget
[4 December 2006]
A sign of political crisis:
coalition of Sri Lankan parties formed
[3 November 2006]
A socialist program to end
the war in Sri Lanka
[21 October 2006]
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