BANGALORE,
December 26, 2013
98.3 p.c. South Western Railway workers favour general strike
In its first strike ballot since 1974, when a 20-day
strike by the George Fernandes-led All India Railwaymen Federation
(AIRF) brought the country’s railway network to a standstill, 98.3 per
cent of over 30,000 workers in the South Western Railway (SWR) voted in
favour of an indefinite general strike in a strike ballot this week.
This is against a national average of 96 per cent workers in favour of a
strike, if the Union government failed to meet their demands by March
2014.
The South Western Railway includes the Hubli,
Bangalore and Mysore divisions and the two workshops in Hubli and
Mysore. Compared to the South Western Railway, the vote in support of
the strike was 81.6 per cent in Southern Railway.
Indian Railways, the country’s largest employer, employs over 13.5 lakh workers.
A.M.
D’Cruz, general secretary of the South Western Railway Mazdoor Union,
an AIRF-affiliate union, said that the call for the strike was first
made in November 2012, to which the government responded “partially and
as token” in September this year.
The strike call
here has been widely supported by smaller trade groups within the
railways such as loco pilots (represented by the All India Loco Running
Staff Association) and station masters unions.
Mr.
Cruz believed that the “huge and historic support” owes to the critical
nature of the demands. The immediate trigger appears to be the decision
on the new pension scheme for over 3 lakh employees, who have been
appointed after January 2004, where their pension benefits will be
linked to the market. However, he says, that there are 36 other demands,
including increase in wages (bonus, transport and cadre restructuring),
filling over 1.5 lakh vacancies and improvement of infrastructure in
Railway hospitals. The union has also been opposing the increasing
contractualisation of various services.
Loco pilots
Much
like the early 1970s, today the conditions are ripe for unrest and
strike, said Sunish C. of the All India Loco Pilots Running Staff
Association. The South Western Railway has over 2,000 loco pilots and
there is discontent among whom on several issues ranging from wage
structures to duty hours and infrastructure remaining unresolved, he
said.
The union has supported the strike call because
the railway workers have lost out over the years as their unions have
always favoured cooperating with the management, he said. “Even when all
the central trade unions went on strike last year, the railways unions
refrained to not inconvenience commuters. But, the government has forced
us into this,” he said.
John Vincent, president of
the Station Masters Association, said that his association has supported
the strike call because wages have remained stagnant despite inflation,
and the Railways has been “anti-labour”. He said that there were large
number of vacant posts among station masters — 20 to 30 per cent
vacancies — which the Railways was not addressing.
“Due
to this, we work extra shifts and hours, and sometimes are even denied a
weekly off. The administration is also forcing supervisory posts in
station masters’ to take up additional tasks such as signalling. This
affects functioning, efficiency and safety of the Railways apart from
the fact that it is exploitative of labour,” he said.
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