Trade unions refuse to call off 2 September strike Trade unions reject the request to call off the strike saying that the government has failed to address their 12-point charter of demands
Senior Union ministers on Saturday held extensive talks after trade unions said no to the government’s request to call off their proposed nationwide general strike on 2 September.
Labour
minister Bandaru Dattatreya had urged the central trade unions on
Friday to reconsider their decision to go on strike. However, trade
unions on Saturday rejected the request saying that the government has
failed to address their 12-point charter of demands. Replying to
Dattatreya’s letter, Trade Unions said the status report on the demands is
“almost the same as that you circulated exactly one year ago, in the
joint meeting with the CTUs held on August 26-27, on the eve of the
general strike in 2015”.
The unions attacked the government saying
it is “equally unfortunate” that no concrete measures have been spelt on
the issue of price control of essential commodities, statutorily fixing
the minimum wage as per norms and social security. Meanwhile, power and
coal minister Piyush Goyal and Dattatreya on Saturday held extensive
consultations and meetings with senior labour ministry officials over
the proposed countrywide strike, sources said.
Both Goyal and Dattatreya are part of the
five-member ministers’ panel on labour issues, which is chaired by
finance minister Arun Jaitley, to talk to the CTUs over the 12-point
charter of demands. The panel has recently held two-rounds of
discussions with Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh-affiliate Bhartiya Mazdoor
Sangh (BMS) on 16 August and 24 August, which has also been “severely
criticised” by other unions for holding such “exclusive discussions”.
The panel last met all the unions on 26-27
August 2015. The unions had requested Dattaterya on 18 July this year to
hold a meeting with the ministers’ panel to pay heed to their point of
view, but no such meeting was convened.
In anticipation of some positive
response on the charter of demands, BMS is holding back its decision to
join the stir on 2 September. Last year, BMS had opted out of ‘Bharat
Bandh’ (2 September 2015) in view of the government’s assurances to work
on nine out of the 12 demands.
CITU general secretary Tapan Sen told PTI that
there is no question of calling back the strike. Similarly, Indian
National Trade Union Congress (INTUC) vice president Ashok Singh also
said that the decision to go ahead with strike stands. AITUC said,
“AITUC along with other CTUs finds it difficult to accept your
(government’s) request for reconsideration of call of protest strike on
September 2, 2016. The decision to go on strike stands.”
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