THE TASK BEFORE THE POSTAL EMPLOYEES AND
CENTRAL GOVT. EMPLOYEES
EITHER FIGHT OR PERISH.
M. Krishnan
Ex- Secretary General, NFPE
& Confederation
1. Central Government
employees, particularly postal employees have a history of one and a half
century of struggle spanning from pre-independence period to post-independence
era. I am not venturing to explain the history of that period of sacrifice,
brutal repression, severe punishments, and martyrdom in this article. That can
be, on another occassion. I am trying to explain the common character of the
struggles conducted by the Central Government employees and postal employees in
pre and post independence era and their future task based on this experience.
2. If one analyse the
struggles organised during seventy years period prior to 1947, it can be seen
that majority of those struggles were mainly for achieving defined wage
structure and service conditions which was not in existence at that period. Thus, through several big and small
agitations and strikes, fixed working hours, wage structure based on the nature
of duty performed, annual increments, leave entitlement, allowance to
compensate price rise, pensionery benefits, right to organise and collective
bargaining were achieved by employees from the most oppressive and unwilling
British Government.
3. None of the
benefits were granted as a gratis by the British Government. Each benefit was obtained through heroic
struggle. The strike oganised by Postmen
of Pune Head Post Office under the guidance of great freedom fighter Late
Balagangadhara Tilak in the year 1880, the indefinite strike of Telegraph
workers in 1908 under the leadership of Henry Barton, the indefinite strike of
1918 by Postmen of Mumbai under the leadership of V.G.Dalvi, the struggle organised
by Potal Clerks in the years 1920-21 against the retrograde recommendations of
Postal Enquiry Committee Report under the inspiring leadership of late Tarapada
Mukherjee, the founder father of Postal Trade Union movement, the historic
speech and clarion call for struggle by Tarpada Mukherjee in the 1921 Lahore
speech and his consequent dismissal from service, the non-coperation agitation
in 1931 of Postal employees under the leadership of Dada Ghosh, the 25 days
strike of 1946 which is written in golden letters in the history of Indian
Independence struggle, commenced by Postmen of Mumbai and then joined by entire
P & T employees and finally converted into a biggest working class strike,
inspired and guided by the revolutionary leader Late K.G.Bose, who electrified
the entire Central Government employees movement --- all these struggles were
organised for achieving new benefits which were not available to Central
Government employees till then. Most of
the benefits which are now enjoyed by the Central Government employees are the
result of the prolonged struggles conducted in pre-independent India, during
British regime. Thousands of known and
unnown leaders and workers had sacrificed their entire life for the cause of
posterity during those period.
4. After independence
(1947) upto 1990’s the struggle conducted by Central Government employees and
Postal employees was mainly for
improving or betterment of the benefits earned during the pre-independence
period and to some extent for realizing some left out benefits like
Bonus. The main cause of the struggles
were for betterment of wages and other service conditions mainly through
various pay commission mechanisms and also through various ED committees in the
case of Gramin Dak Sevaks formerly called as Extra-Departmental Agents. The indefinite strike notice of 1957
demanding appointment of second Central Pay Commission and nationwide preparations
thereof, indefinite strike of 1960 which lasted for five days demanding
modifications and improvement of second pay commission recommendations, the
historic one day strike of 1968 September 19th demanding Need Based Minimum
Wage, 1974 Bonus strike of Railway Employees in which other Central Government
employees also joined as solidarity strike for few days, the struggle against
the attack on wages, DA and other service conditions during the 1975 Emergency
period, the historic 1984 one day strike solely for realization of GDS demands,
many other agitational programmes other than strikes --- all were conducted for
improvement of wages and other service conditions. These struggles were organised at national
level under the leadership of legendary leaders like Dada Ghosh, K.G.Bose,
N.J.Iyer, K.Adinarayana, Om Prakash Gupta, S.K.Vyas, and N.P.Padmanabhan and
many other leaders in various states.
5. The post
independence period upto 1990’s was also the period of tremendous growth and
leap forward of Central Government services and departments. It was a period of all-round development of
Central services. Through the five year
plan, the Central Government expanded the Central services to all parts of the
nation for catering to various needs of the people like Communications, health,
education, industry etc. etc. More and
more offices were opened in cities and villages. To cope up with the work load due to opening
of new offices and further expansion of services thousands of new posts were
created and lakhs of new employees were recruited and appointed. To supervise and coordinate the activities of
field offices, Administrative offices at State, Central and Ministry level were
also established. Thus there was big
increase in the number of offices and number of employees in Central Services
during this period. The quality of the
services also has improved a lot.
6. This growth
trajectory lasted for 42 years from 1947 to 1990. From 1991 onwards very big policy change took
place in Central Services. Neo-liberal
globalisation policies were implemented in all sectors of the economy. Central services were not an exception. Closure of offices, merger of offices, Ban on
recruitment, abolition of vacant posts, Ban on creation of new posts,
Largescale outsourcing of the work performed by Central Government employees,
introduction of Casual, Contract and daily rated mazdoor system, corporatisation
of Government departments as a prelude to eventual privatisation are some of
the neo-liberal policies introduced in Central Government services. Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Pay Commissions,
Expenditure Reforms Commission and various expert committees gave
recommendations to expedite the implementation of neo-liberal policies in all
Central Goverment departments. During
this period various types of resistance struggles were organised by Central
Government employees in general and in each department. In Postal department struggle and strikes
against reorganisation and closure of Post Offices and RMS Offices, outsourcing
of speed post booking, non-filling up of vacancies and closure of Branch Post
Offices took place during the period from 1991 onwards along with the struggle
for improvement of wages and service conditions and also against curtailment of
trade union facilities.
7. From 1991 onwards,
the struggle of Central Government employees are mainly against the neo-liberal
policies of closure, downsizing, outsourcing, corporatisation and casual
contract system. Unlike in the pre-independence period upto
1947 and post-independence period upto 1990’s, when the struggles were
mainly for achieving benefits and for improving the wages and service
conditions, the struggles from 1991 onwards in the Central Government
departments was mainly for job security of employees. Existence of each department and its
employees faced big challenge from the policy of the Government. Consequently, as a corollary to these
attacks, attack on wage structure, social security and trade union rights also
intensified. The contributory pension
system (NPS) was introduced. Instead of struggle for improving the existing
benefits, the struggle for protecting the existing benefits became more
prominent. Confederation of Central
Government Employees & Workers
organised strikes in 2012, 2014 and 2016. The historic sixteen days All India
strike of Gramin Dak Sevaks took place during this period.
8. The Telecom
department, which was a part of Central Government Services with about
five lakhs employees and 10000 crore
rupees yearly profit was corporatised during the period of neo-liberal reforms.
Private telecom companies are given licences to operate. Government privatised
VSNL. Ultimate result was that BSNL and MTNL became loss making entities and
lakhs of employees were sent out on Voluntary Retirement scheme (VRS).
9. After coming to
power at Centre in 2014, the BJP-led
Modi Government started vigourously implementing the extreme neo-liberal
polices of naked privatisation and dismantling of public sector and Government
departments. In the defence sector the
FDI limit is raised to 74% from 49%.
Defence ordinance factories are going to be corporatised and
privatised. In postal department India
Post Payment Bank (IPPB), a public
limited company, started functioning.
Proposal for corporatisation of Postal Life Insurance and Rural Postal
Life Insurance is pending approval of the cabinet. Conversion of the existing parcel Directorate
into a seperate company is in the pipeline.
Most of the work now done by postal employees such as booking of
registered and speed post articles, money orders, acceptance of all savings
bank deposits etc are going to be handed over to a public limited company
called Common Service Centre (CSC). If
all the above reforms are implemented, thousands of postal employees will become surplus and
their job security will be in danger.
The situation in other Central Government departments is also more or
less the same. Govt’s decision to close
down 12 out of 17 Government of India Printing Preses is an eye-opener to all
those who believe that NDA Government will protect their job. During the Covid-19 pandenic period, the
Government has declared unbridled privatisation of all strategic sectors
including Space Research, Atomic energy, Defence production etc. The refusal of the Central Government to
honour the assurance to increase the minimum pay and fitment formula, rejection
of the demand to scrap Contributory Pension Scheme (NPS) and restore Old
Pension Scheme (OPS), refusal to grant civil servant status and all benefits of
regular employees to Gramin Dak Sevaks, increasing attack on the trade union
rights are all part of this extreme neo-liberal policies pursued by the
Government. Freezing of Dearness
Allowance and impounding of arrears till 30-06-2021 in the name of Covid-19
crisis is another blow to the Central Government employees. Stringent measures to implement the
provisions of FR 56(j),(l) and Pension Rules 48 is a calculated move by
Government to terrorise the employees.
10. Central Government
employees in general and Postal employees in particular are facing very very
serious challenges and crisis, never faced in the past, due to the ruthless
policies being implemented by Modi Government.
Their job security, wage structure, social security and trade union
rights are under severe attack. How to
overcome this situation? How to protect
the hard-won benefits of the employees which are the fruits of the struggle and
sacrifice made by thousands of workers and leaders in the past 150 years? The answer is that the Central Government
employees, especially Postal Employees, who have a history of heroic struggles
and sacrifice, should be ready for uncompromising struggle and for more
sacrifices than the sacrifices of our earlier leaders and workers at grass root level. Benefits, wages and service conditions which
are the products of hard-won battles of the past, can be protected through
still bigger and more militant struggles only.
This is what history teaches us.
There is no short-cut. There is
no substitute for the struggle for existence.
There is only two options left - either fight or perish. Let us not surrender. Let us stand up and fight. Let us make the 2020 November 26th one day
National Strike a resounding success.
__________
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