CONFEDERATION OF CENTRAL GOVT. EMPLOYEES & WORKERS
1st Floor,
North Avenue PO Building, New Delhi – 110001
Website:
www.confederationhq.blogspot.com
Circular
No:
15
Date:
5/4/2014
Dear
Comrade,
The National Convention of Central Government employees as scheduled was held
at Nagpur on 4th April, 2014. The convention was inaugurated by Com. A.K.
Padmanabhan, National President, CITU and was addressed by Com. B.N.J.
Sharma, President, AITUC, Nagpur District Committee .
The Draft resolution prepared by the National Secretariat was presented
to the house by Com. M.S. Raja, Working President, Confederation. Com. K.K.N.
Kutty, President, read out the two amendments received at the CHQ. In the
deliberations that ensued thereafter 31 comrades participated. Com. M.
Krishnan, Secretary General, summed up the discussion and indicated the
acceptance of the suggestions made by the delegates who participated in the
deliberations. A copy of the final version of the resolution as adopted
by the Convention unanimously is enclosed. Before the adoption of the
resolution in its final form by the house, Com. S.K. Vyas, Advisor, Com.
Narasimhan, Vice President and Com. K.P. Rajagopal, Secretary, Confederation
addressed the house.
The National Secretariat of the Confederation met on the same day at
7.00PM. It took the following decisions to carry out the directives of
the Convention.
1. The State Committees of the Confederation and its affiliated Federations
will take steps to translate the resolution in the respective local languages
immediately and ensure that the same is circulated amongst the members.
2. Meetings will be organised in all offices to explain the contents of the
resolution adopted by the National Convention.
3. The National Secretariat members who are assigned the responsibility (as
per the details in the annexure) will interact with the State Secretaries and
ensure that the campaign programme of reaching out to all members is carried
out in all States.
4. The State Committees will solicit and enlist the services of the
Pensioners organisations to carry out the campaign amongst the mass of the
people.
All affiliates and State Committees are requested to take immediate
steps to carry out the above decisions of the National Secretariat.
With greetings,
Yours fraternally,
M. Krishnan
Secretary General.
Name of the Secretariat Member:
State Assigned.
1. M. Krishnan and R.Seethalakshmi.
Karnataka and Kerala.
2. Com . K.K.N. Kutty and Com.
Duraipandian.
Tamilnadu.
3. Com. Narasimhan, Nageswara Rao and P.Suresh:
Andhra
Pradesh
4. Com. R.P.Singh and Com. P.
Jeyaraj.
Mumbai.
5. Coms. P.K. Das. Gupreet Singh. & Nilesh
Nasre
Vidharbha.
6. Com. Yeshwant Purohit and Com.T.K.R.
Pillai.
Mdhya
Pradesh.
7. Com. T.N. Parasar T.
Sathyanaryana.
Gujarat.
8. Com.
Suresh. Chattisgarh.
9. Com. Vrighu Bhattacharjee and Giriraj
Singh.
Jhararkhand.
10. Com. R.N. Dhall Orissa.
11. Vrighu Bhattachary and Giriraj
Singh.
Bihar.
12. Com.R.N.
Parasar.
U.P.
13. Com. Somaiah, Ashok Kanojia.& K.P.Rajagopal . Haryana.
And Punjab,
14. Com. M.S.
Raja.
H.P. and Utrakhand
15. Com. S.K. Vyas and Com.N. Somaiah
Rajasthan
16. Com.R.N. Parasar, Vrigu Bjattacjarya, A.K. Kanojia & Giriraj Singh.
Delhi.
RESOLUTION adopted at the National
Convention of Central Government employees
on 4th April, 2014 at Nagpur.
1. The National Secretariat of the Confederation places on record its
appreciation over the massive and magnificent participation of the largest
number of our members in the 48 hour strike on 12thand 13th Feb.
2014. It was a great manifestation of the confidence the members had
reposed in the organization and their determination to win the demands through
struggles. The reports, the Confederation CHQ received both
from the affiliates and the State Committee indicate the massive participation
of the employees in the strike action throughout the county. In some
of the affiliates, the participation had been cent percent. This
must embolden the Confederation to pursue the issue with determination and
organize further action programmes to ensure that the demands are got settled.
2. The Secretariat has noted that the Government had pretended to
ignore the massive action of the employees. There had been no
response from them so far. In the wake of the strike action, it
announced the composition of the 7th CPC disregarding the
united demand raised by the Staff side of the JCM National Council for the
inclusion of a labour representative. The Government also chose not
to convene the meeting the staff side to discuss the draft terms of reference
submitted. It did not make any announcement on the question of
merger of DA, Interim Relief, and inclusion of GDA within the ambit of the
Commission and rejected the demand for making the recommendation of the
Commission effective from 1.1.2014.
3. On every issue, which is included in the 15
point Charter of demands, the Govt. continued with its nugatory attitude. In
the last session of the Parliament, they ensured that the PFRDA bill becomes an
Act despite the strongest objection and resistance of the employees by
eliciting and receiving the support and patronage of the dominant opposition
party, the BJP. Even on an
issue like compassionate appointments, no positive response emerged. The period witnessed increased outsourcing of
governmental functions. Almost a third of the workforce is presently casual and contract workers
with abysmally poor wages taking advantage of the acute unemployment situation
in the country. There had
been no settlement of any issue raised by the Staff Side in the National
Council JCM. The JCM scheme has been made ineffective as not a
single meeting of the Council was held in the last three years and even the
decision taken at the National Anomaly Committee was thwarted through political
intervention.
4. The plight of the three lakh Gramin Dak Sevaks
of the Postal Department is highly deplorable. They constitute almost
half of the Postal work force. But for them, the functioning of the Postal
system will come to a grinding halt. Their service conditions are
presently worse off than even a causal/daily rated worker. Despite the Supreme
Court’s decisions that they are holders of Civil Post and consequently are
entitled to the benefits and privileges of a civil servant, there had been no
improvement in their service conditions worth mentioning. In spite of
repeated presentation of their case both inside and outside the Parliament by
people from all walks of life irrespective of party affiliation, the Government
had been silent to the pleading for bringing them within the ambit of the Pay
Commissions. Confederation is duty bound and determined to change the
situation and to bring them within the purview of the 7th CPC.
5. During its five year tenure the UPA II was in
power, it intensified the neo-liberal reforms; phased out all welfare
measures; accentuated the unemployment situation; divested the PSUs; allowed
unbridled entry of Foreign capital to subjugate the Indian people; ruined the
indigenous industry; destroyed the livelihood of the farmers and agricultural
labourers; allowed the prices of all essential food items to soar; privatised
education and health care services; ensured that each of its decision was to
favour the rich; granted huge tax concessions to the corporate; indulged in
large scale corruption; squandered away the national wealth; siphoned off the
poor man’s earning into the hands of a few rich in the country; sided with the
entrepreneurs in all labour disputes; took each and every political
decision to sub-serve the interest of the imperialist powers especially the
USA. The pursuance of the neo liberal policies at the behest of the
advanced capitalist countries drove the majority of Indian population to be
below the poverty levels. In the comity of nations, India became the poorest
and the last ranking in all fields. Indian youth were driven to be beggars at
the doors of transnational corporations and developed countries.
6. Those who were responsible in driving our
country men to unprecedented deprivation have to now seek mandate, for their
tenure is to end shortly. No different is the approach of the major
opposition party, BJP. There is nothing to choose from these two
political dispensations. They were hand in glove together to demolish the
sovereignty of the country; pauperisation of the people and supported every
legislation to intensify the neo liberal exploitation of the common man.
They supported to the hilt the corporate houses. But for the support
extended by the BJP, the PFRDA bill would never have been made into a
law. The Act now provides for the extension of the new contributory
pension scheme to those who were recruited prior to 1.1.2004 and the existing
pensioners. Despite the refusal of the Government to accept their
suggestion to guarantee minimum pension, the BJP unashamedly supported the
Bill, for they were the proponents of the neo liberal economic policies.
They supported this Government to increase the FDI and FII in all sectors of
economy and announced that they would intensify the reform process if elected
to power. The conglomeration of Corporates in the country has now
appointed the leader of that party to be the next CEO to run the country.
They have no use for the discredited UPA howsoever subservient it could
be. They know in a democratic system demagogy can play a vital
role. They are certain that BJP and its allies if elected to power will
be much more pliant and compliant.
7. The Corporate controlled media has created an
illusion to the effect that there exists a consensus across the political
spectrum in the country that the neo liberal policies will spur economic growth
and the only point to be clinched in the forthcoming election is as to which
political combination, whether the UPA led by Rahul Gandhi or the NDA of
Narendra Modi is more efficient in pursuing the IMF dictated economic policies
vigorously. Economic growth is not akin to development. In the initial
years of the introduction of the LPG, no doubt, the economy grew phenomenally,
but the large majority of Indian people suffered. It permanently halted the
bringing up of an egalitarian society. It only enlarged the scope for
maximisation of profit of the corporate giants; opened up larger and bigger
avenues for corruption at the top of administration, whereby the ruling party
and its leaders could amass wealth. The scams unearthed by the
Comptroller and Auditor General of India during the last five years of UPA II Rule
speak volumes of the cancerous growth of corruption in our country. The
2G spectrum involving Rs. 1.76 lakh crores, the Coalgate of the dimension
of Rs. 1.86 lakh crores, the corruption involved in the commonwealth games, the
Rs. 40,000 cr deal in the Delhi Airport Privatisation scheme, The KG Basin
related Gas price deal with Reliance, topping with Rs 48 lakh crores are a few
that surfaced during this period.
8. As part of the economic policy, concerted and
continuous efforts were made to the job killing process in all sectors, through
contractorisation, casualisation, outsourcing, privatisation etc. Contract
workers now constitute 80% of the total work force in the private sector.
After the implementation of the 6th CPC recommendations about 35% of the
workforce in the Governmental sector is either contract or casual
workers. They are paid quarter of or even less the wages of the regular
workers.
9. This election is not only to decide who should
govern this country but more so to determine for whom the governance is. UPA
having been totally discredited in the eyes of the common man has no chance
whatsoever. NDA must not have a chance once again for it is bound to
pursue the neo liberal policies more vigorously than even the UPA. That is the
one and only reason why the Indian corporate houses and the corporate
controlled media solidly back the BJP and the BJP led NDA. The Political
combination outside the NDA and UPA has a predominant presence in the 15th Lok Sabha. They are capable of being
the largest segment in the 16th Lok
Sabha too.
10. It is in this background that the workers must
assess the political situation. In the forthcoming electoral battle,
every worker must discharge his salutary responsibility. Since the
present state of affairs is the product of the neo- liberal policies and since
both the UPA and the NDA are the proponents of those policies, one must have
clear vision and exercise the franchise effectively to ensure that a
pro-worker, pro-people combination of parties is in governance. In the
forthcoming election to the 16th Lok
Sabha, the Central Government employees must become a vehicle for change in the
interest of the common people; rise above the divisive ideologies and
misleading propaganda; identify their friends especially in the Left parties;
and ensure the success of those who stood with them and fought for the cause of
the workers and common people.
11. The Secretariat came to the inescapable
conclusion that the settlement of the demands in the charter will only be
possible through intensification of the struggles. It recognised the need
for larger unity. It will strive for bringing about such a united platform for
joint action. The inevitability of an indefinite strike action has to be
emphasised. The Confederation and its affiliates must prepare its members
for such an eventual and unavoidable action, if the proposed 7th CPC is to really revise the wages.
It is needed to ensure the withdrawal of the pernicious contributory pension
scheme. It only will ensure that there are no casual or contract system
of employment in Government service. The Government employees must
be bestowed with democratic rights and above all must enjoy the facility for
collective bargaining and right to strike. The Gramin Dak Sevak system is a colonial legacy and no civilised
country must endure such brutal exploitation. All is possible through
united and sustained action. The Confederation has proved beyond any iota
of doubt that it has built up an organisation capable of carrying out such an
action.
12. To ensure that the Indian people have food security, the farmers are not
driven to commit suicide, the workers do have decent job environment and
emoluments, the prices of essential commodities do not soar, there is universal
public distribution of essential food articles; India has an independent
foreign policy, this great Nation is not enslaved by western imperial powers
once again, all communities and people of different faiths are allowed to live
in peace and harmony; no communal violence erupts; all able bodied people have
jobs and livelihood, there must be a Government which exist for the sake of the
poor inhabitants of this country. Central Government employees must take
an active role in the ensuing General election and strive with their best to
bring about such a Government.
13. This convention calls upon every worker of the Confederation to fan out
and reach out to the rank and file of its membership, explain the stupendous
task ahead; to work in consonance with the understanding depicted in this
resolution and ensure that they become instruments for a great political change
in our country.
14. The Convention authorises the National Secretariat to review the
political situation emerging after the election and take appropriate decision
to mobilise the rank and file of the workers for an eventual industrial action
to seek settlement of the 15 point charter of demands.
******
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