12 May 2015

Hosiery Workers Go On Strike Demanding Minimum Wages


The hosiery industry faces a grievous crisis today. The employers have taken an inhuman and rigid stand towards the wage issue raised by workers. They are refusing to pay the State Government declared minimum wage of Rs.7575 per month, especially in the stitching department. As per the law of the land, payment of minimum wages cannot be made conditional on productivity. Despite this, the employers have directly connected payment of minimum wage to production, pressurising workers to work at levels which are exhausting. Thus, their inflexibility about payment of minimum wage is not only illegal, it is also inhuman and immoral. The hosiery workers demand:
  • immediate and unconditional payment of minimum wages
  • attendance register and wages register in all factories
  • appointment letter for all workers.
  • safe and clean working environment in all factories
  • equal wages for equal work for all women workers.
The Joint Action Front of all hosiery worker unions has called for a strike on all the above issues from 11th to 14th May 2015.

The Oshongothit Khetra Shramik Sangrami Manch extends its full support to the strike.
Swapan Ganguly, Somnath Ghosh
Convenors

04 May 2015

'Punish The Murderers of Feroze Dafadar'


Feroze Dafadar, member of Paschim Banga Telecom Tower Workers Union (constituent of our Asanghathita Kshetra Shramik Sangrami Mancha and an affiliate of NTUI) was brutally murdered by the ruling party goons on May 1, 2015. He is also a Panchayat Pradhan of Dhanonjoypur gram panchayat under Nakashipara police station. We condemn his murder. We demand immediate arrest and exemplary punishment of the murderers.
 
Swapan Ganguly & Somnath Ghosh (Conveners)

29 April 2015

Join The General Strike, Defend Working Class Rights


With the open use of a violent goon army, supported by the Trinamul Congress, the administration and even the State Election Commission, and with ordinary people unable to vote, the 2015 West Bengal Municipal elections was turned into an example of election-by-terror. The present regime has followed the footsteps of the previous Government, but with even more ferocity and violence. The Trinamul Congress (TMC) which came to power on the slogan of Paribartan or change has ended up instead with a rule replete with promoters, cheats, rapists and goons.

It is not as if elections can create heaven on earth. But it is a part of our democratic rights- it is our right to vote with freedom and to remove a party we do not like. We were the first to start protests on the streets after the TMC came to power. We did not do this from any political party interest. Our struggle was for the rights of the unorganised sector workers. We live in a State where most workers do not get minimum wages, where there is no guarantee to get work and where workers are deprived of any social security. In our State, the procession of tea plantation workers who have died due to starvation and of farmers who commit suicide because they cannot sell their produce continues. Despite all this, the Government's attention is focused on clubs who receive lakhs of rupees. The reason behind this has become clear after the vote- the strategy has been to tap into the frustration of a section of hopeless, unemployed youth, creating an army of goons that are a powerful weapon in the fight to win elections.

However time and again, working people and unemployed youth in search of employment are faced with the truth that is only through united struggle that there can be any sustainable change in their situation. Rights won through hard struggles can only be expanded and protected through such struggle. However for such a struggle we need democratic space and rights. And, we have experienced that no government is willing to accept these democratic rights without a sustained struggle. Without the right to vote freely, other democratic rights also tend to be under attack.  

During the Left Front's regime also, working people were repeatedly deprived and workers and farmers were the target of bullets. The question is not about whether the CPI(M) got votes or not, but about people's democratic right. While we have very justified reasons for being angry with the CPI(M), maintaining a "neutral" role in the present situation will be our loss. Therefore not because we are dreaming of a Left Front victory, but because we want a better life for working people (which is possible only through struggle), we appeal to everyone to take a step in this direction by supporting the strike called on 30th April. This strike may be a method for the Left to capitalise on the anger and frustration of people with the elections and to use this for their narrow electoral objectives. But the anger and frustration of the common people with the present elections is a reality. So, we are calling on all working people to use this strike as a weapon to protect their democratic rights. We demand a clean, transparent, non-partisan administration and police functioning. We demand an end to partisan politics and the establishment of true democracy. We demand an end to the use of muscle power. We demand the establishment of an open, democratic political culture.


Swapan Ganguly, Somnath Ghosh (Convenors)

'Asanghathita Kshetra Shramik Sangrami Manch'

16 March 2015

Nandigram's Forgotten Rape Victims Living In Precarious Conditions


A team of Women against Sexual Violence and State Repression (WSS), West Bengal, comprising Anuradha Talwar, Nisha Biswas, Rama Debnath, Rangta Munshi, Saswati Ghosh, Sharmistha Choudhury and Swapna Banerjee visited Nandigram on March 10, 2015, to study the condition of the women of Nandigram who had been at the forefront of the heroic struggle against land acquisition back in 2007-2009.

What we saw saddened and disturbed us for a number of reasons, the foremost being the fact that these women, who had once been powerful leaders of a historic mass movement, are today not only distressed but disempowered as well. We tried to assess the present condition of the women of Nandigram and here is what we learned:

THE FACTS GLEANED

Status of legal cases
  • Nobody was able to give any concrete information on the status of the cases filed by the rape survivors. It is not certain that cases of rape were filed at all.
  • A total of 362 cases – including 9 murder cases – against more than 4,000 persons involved in the Nandigram Movement were registered in 2007-2009.
  • 160 minor cases have been withdrawn so far. The court has not allowed withdrawal of some of the cases that the government wanted to withdraw.
  • According to BUPC leaders, chargesheets have been filed in almost all the cases, though trial is yet to begin.
  • However, we were unable to ascertain the exact status of the cases.

Compensation Payment 
  • All 159 injured on March 14, 2007 have received compensation of Rs 1 Lakh as per High Court order.
  • Only 3 out of 16 rape survivors have received compensation of Rs 2 lakh.

CBI Investigation 
  • In December 2013 CBI instituted cases against more than 30 men and women – including women who were severely injured and/or raped like Radharani Aari, Kajal Majhi, Gouri Pradhan, etc. – on charges of attacking the police and inciting violence.
  • BUPC sought dismissal of above cases in HC, but was denied by the Single Bench. Now appeal is lying before the Division Bench of HC.
  • CBI also sought Govt. permission to initiate criminal proceedings against some Police Officials.
  • Govt. is yet to respond on the above.
  • It appears that the CID was in charge of the cases at some point. According to BUPC leaders, the subsequent intervention of the CBI threw everything in disarray due to confusion regarding the respective domains of responsibility. What is beyond doubt, however, that all this has resulted in justice being denied to the victims.

Status of some women of struggle:
  1. Tapasi Das (38 yrs)  
  • Bullet injured her uterus, causing permanent gynecological and neurological problems.
  • Remains in persistent pain and is confined to bed most of the time.
  • Difficulty in walking, severe limp.
  •  Gets meagre Rs 1500 per month from local MP for treatment. This amount, however, is not even sufficient to cover the travel expenses she has to incur to continue with her treatment.
  •  Husband got a temporary job in Metro Rail.

  1. Radha Rani Ari (45 yrs) 
  • Gangraped twice.
  • Not received compensation. Rumour is some imposter made away with her compensation.
  • Suffers severe social stigma, husband too accuses her. 
  •   Rape accused are out on bail and are back in the locality. 
  • Gets meagre Rs1500 per month from local MP. 
  •  One son got a temporary job in Metro Rail.

  1. Angur Das (40 yrs) 
  • Raped on 14th March along with her daughters Kabita (married with 2 kids) and Ganga (then unmarried) 
  • No compensation 
  • 3 sons work in a carpet factory in U.P. 
  •  Husband works in small patch of own land. 
  • Heavily depressed. Ganga is now married but is facing problems at in-laws’ for non-payment of agreed dowry.
  1. Kabita Das (22yrs) 
  •  Daughter of Angur Das. 
  • Not allowed to return to marital home after rape incident. 
  •  Lives with mother. Husband visits occasionally.

  1. Srabanti Das Adhikari (35yrs) 
  • Received compensation of Rs 2 Lakh as per HC order 
  •  Works as cook in ICDS 
  • Unwilling to talk, ‘I am fine, have to stay here.’

SOME OBSERVATIONS
  • Women like Tapasi Das, Radharani Aari and others, who had become the face of the Nandigram Movement, who had suffered rape, bullet wounds and state terror but had remained at the forefront of the heroic struggle against forcible land acquisition, who had subsequently been instrumental in unseating the then Left Front government from power, have today been absolutely edged out of the political space. They are neither called to Bhumi Uchchhed Pratirodh Committee (BUPC) meetings, nor invited to Martyrs’ Day observations, nor given the recognition they deserve.
  • Radharani Aari recalls how, in the run-up to the Bidhan Sabha election of 2011, she was much sought after by the present ruling party. She would be taken on political campaigns all across the country and made to describe the barbaric sexual torture that was inflicted on her. “My body was like a property that would get the votes,” she says. Now, with that party firmly in power, she has been carelessly abandoned, left to fend for herself. “I often contemplate suicide,” she says.
  • The women have been silenced by the brute force of male domination. All the rape accused, like Badal Garu, Kalia Garu, Rabin Das, etc., have returned to their homes – after months of exile to escape public wrath – and this ‘rehabilitation’ has taken place after negotiation with the BUPC (male) leadership. Radharani Aari and the other women allege that the BUPC leaders took hefty sums of money from the rapists in exchange of granting them permission to return home. None of the raped women was consulted in the process. Now with the rapists at large, and often inhabiting adjacent houses, these women live in constant fear. BUPC leaders tell them, “What’s your problem?” Their problem is that justice has not been done, and it does not seem like that it will.
  •  Very few of the women who were raped, injured or otherwise tortured in the course of their valiant role in the Nandigram Movement have been rewarded by the government. In most of the cases, the husband or the son has been provided some kind of a job by the new government, in lieu of the woman’s sacrifice. The woman, however, has received virtually nothing. For example, the son of Radharani Aari – who was gang raped twice in 2007-2008 – has been given a job by the new government, and leaders now tell her, “What else do you want?”
  • The women are in precarious health. Tapasi Das, whose thigh was almost sawed off and uterus hit when the police opened fire on unarmed women and children on March 14, 2007, lives in perpetual pain. There is nobody to oversee her medical treatment or ensure that she gets it. Radharani Aari and other women who were raped by hoodlums of the then ruling party are victims of severe trauma. They are all in need of medical attention, which is absent.
  • A grand hospital built in memory of the martyrs of Nandigram stands amidst sprawling acres, the picture of grim dereliction and waste. The caretaker said that a doctor visits once or twice a month, but even that thin story did not ring true. It is indeed an irony that with so many women in desperate need of medical attention, a hospital in the very middle of Nandigram should be allowed to go to seed.
  • These women, who were once leaders of one of the most famous mass movements of recent times, are now confined to their homes and subject to all kinds of patriarchal oppression. They cannot marry off their daughters without paying massive dowries as if to ‘compensate’ for the ‘stigma’ of rape. Some of the daughters have been thrown out of their marital homes as ‘punishment’. Even neighbours have now taken to pointing fingers at the rape survivors. This social chastisement, in conjunction with crippling poverty, has broken their hearts.

These are the findings of our first visit to Nandigram. We hope to follow this up with more visits in the future and stand firmly by the women in their fight for justice.