People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 09 March 02, 2003 |
Claim
of
Unanimous
Support
is
Unfounded
THROUGH
a
statement
issued
on
February
20,
the
Centre
of
Indian
Trade
Unions
(CITU)
lambasted
the
government’s
claim
that
the
Unorganised
Sector
Workers
Bill
2003
has
the
unanimous
support
from
trade
unions.
The
CITU
was
reacting
to
a
press
handout
issued
by
the
ministry
of
labour,
wherein
it
was
claimed,
inter
alia,
that,
during
the
tripartite
meeting
held
on
February
18-19
at
the
V
V
Giri
National
Labour
Institute
(VVGNLI),
“the
social
partners
unanimously
supported
the
proposal
of
Unorganised
Sector
Workers
Bill
2003.”
The
CITU
statement
made
it
plain
that
four
major
central
trade
unions,
viz
the
CITU,
AITUC,
HMS
and
INTUC,
had
conveyed
to
the
union
labour
minister
that
any
tripartite
consultation
on
the
report
of
the
Second
National
Commission
on
Labour
should
be
held
in
the
Indian
Labour
Conference
(ILC),
convened
by
the
ministry
of
labour.
During
the
meeting
on
February
18-19,
all
the
central
trade
unions
as
well
as
representatives
of
the
employers
had
unanimously
raised
this
demand.
It
was
also
urged
by
both
the
“social
partners”
that
any
discussion
that
may
be
held
during
the
two
days
of
the
tripartite
meeting
can
at
best
generate
some
inputs
for
an
indepth
discussion
later
in
the
ILC
session;
they
could
not
be
treated
as
recommendations
on
the
subjects
discussed.
The
chairpersons
and
labour
secretary
had
then
agreed
to
it.
Also,
the
plenary
discussions
on
the
subjects
took
place
in
the
said
meeting
and
not
in
the
technical
committee
as
was
proposed
in
the
programme
circulated
by
the
VVGNLI.
The
five
major
central
trade
unions,
that
is,
the
above
four
and
the
BMS,
had
also
communicated
their
views
to
the
minister
of
labour,
in
a
joint
letter
dated
January
20,
2003.
They
stated
that
the
draft
bill
did
not
reflect
the
basic
features
of
either
the
recommendations
of
the
Second
National
Commission
on
Labour
or
the
conclusions
of
the
National
Seminar
on
Unorganised
Workers
held
on
November
7-8,
2002.
The
letter
had
suggested
a
complete
redrafting,
requiring
a
lot
more
modification
even
to
cover
the
welfare
part.
During
the
discussions
at
the
meeting
held
in
the
VVGNLI,
even
the
employers’
representatives
had
raised
many
points
with
reference
to
the
bill.
Hence
the
claim
of
unanimous
support
for
the
draft
bill
on
unorganised
sector
workers,
as
made
by
the
ministry
of
labour,
is
totally
unfounded,
the
CITU
maintained.
(INN)