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  • दुनियाभर में अमानवीय शोषण-उत्पीड़न के शिकार हैं प्रवासी कामगार

    असमान आर्थिक विकास की बदौलत देशों के अन्दर एक क्षेत्र से दूसरे क्षेत्र और एक देश से दूसरे देश की तरफ़ (आमतौर पर अविकसित से विकसित की तरफ़) मज़दूरों का प्रवास जारी रहता है। स्थानीय मज़दूरों की संघर्ष की ताक़त अधिक होने के कारण विश्वभर के लुटेरे पूँजीपति स्थानीय की बजाय प्रवासी मज़दूरों को काम पर रखना पसन्द करते हैं। एक तो इन प्रवासी मज़दूरों से कम तनख़्वाह पर काम लिया जाता है, दूसरा स्थानीय और प्रवासी के झगड़े खड़े करके मज़दूरों की एकता की राह में अड़चनें पैदा की जाती हैं।

    The post दुनियाभर में अमानवीय शोषण-उत्पीड़न के शिकार हैं प्रवासी कामगार appeared first on मज़दूर बिगुल.

  • Class War

    Giles Ji Ungpakorn

    The Thai military junta has been summonsing all chairpersons of local trade unions to report to army offices. So far only  about half the elected trade unionists are complying with the dictates of the generals.

    jackboots

    Of course, the junta has not summonsed employers or businessmen to report and be given a lecture in discipline.

    Of course, the junta has not systematically summonsed NGO leaders or conservative academics who  have advocated shrinking the democratic space. Neither has it arrested and jailed the Democrat Party thugs who used violence on the streets earlier this year.

    Taken with the general picture of the military crack down, it is obvious that red shirts, trade unionists, progressive academics and all those who are pro-democracy activists are the target of repression.

    Make no mistake, this is a class war, waged by the conservative elites who hate democracy because democracy helps to empower the poor, the working class and the farmers. They hate Taksin because he won the hearts and minds of the poor and could win elections. They don’t hate Taksin for his human rights abuses or even the fact that he used the same corrupt practices as the generals and the Democrats.

    Filed under: Thai politics Tagged: Class, Thai politics, Trade Unionists

  • Delhi: Press release from protest against changes in Labour laws by Rajasthan government

    KRANTIKARI NAUJAWAN SABHA Date: 18th June 2014 Release Despite the Delhi Police coercion since yesterday to stop the Protest Demonstration for ‘security reasons’, we held a Protest in front of Bikaner House, New Delhi this morning against the anti-labour reforms proposed by the BJP government in Rajasthan. This ‘denial of permission’ for any democratic voices […]

  • 600 Casino Workers Vote On UNITE-HERE Representation

    By Doug Cunningham

    Roughly six hundred casino workers at northern California’s Graton Resort and Casino could have a union soon. They are voting this week on whether or not to join UNITE-HERE. The Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria tribal Chair Greg Sarris is pro-union and put language into the casino’s gaming contract with the state. Sarris says he wants unions at the casino to ensure his dream of a more equitable society. Voting will continue among the 600 workers into the weekend.

     

  • Long Live Comrade Sushil Roy ! by Harsh Thakor

                                                               Comrade Sushil Roy

    Comrade Sushil Roy, veteran leader of the CPI(Maoist), passed away this morning while in a prison hospital. He was the seniormost leader of the CPI(Maoist), and a leader of the undivided CPI, and later MCC as well, before the formation of the CPI(Maoist). 

    The septuagenarian Comrade Sushil Roy had been

  • Officials inspect Wazirpur plants as strike continues

    News courtesy – THE HINDU, 18th June 2014

    Another worker said they were threatened when they asked for legal benefits. “I worked as an electrician for seven years at a hot-rolling plant. When I asked for my PF and other benefits the employers asked me to leave. I could not find another job as an electrician and now put iron blocks into the furnace in another plant now,” said a worker in his early 20s.

    Labour activists said with labour officials agreeing to meet the workers and inspect the plants, they were hopeful labour laws would be implemented.

    “We met the Labour Commissioner on Monday and he deputed an inspection team with a labour official, a health officer, and a factory inspector to visit the plants. They found that most owners are running plants without registration numbers and do not follow even the Factories Act or the Minimum Wages Act. They seized a few plants’ records, and asked the owners, who could not produce the documents, to appear at the office this morning,” said Sunny Singh, a labour activist with Mazdoor Bigul Dasta, who is supporting the Garam Rolla Mazdoor Ekta Samiti workers’ strike.

  • Report: Demonstration against Changes in Labour Laws by Rajasthan Govt

    New Delhi (Press Note/ 18th June 14): Despite the Delhi Police coercion since yesterday to stop the Protest Demonstration for ‘security reasons’, we held a Protest in front of Bikaner House, New Delhi this morning against the anti-labour reforms proposed by the BJP government in Rajasthan. This ‘denial of permission’ for any democratic voices of protest is part of ‘security’ given nakedly or covertly by the state machinery to protect class interests of the corporate regime.

    Resist Anti-Labor Laws

    Resist Anti-Labor Laws

    The changes in the three crucial labour legislations, the Industrial Disputes Act, the Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act, the Factories Act is part of the regime of ‘bitter pills’ that Narendra Modi is talking about today. It is nothing else but the forced implementation of neo-liberal reforms, for which the BJP-led Rajasthan government is supposed to have ‘shown the way’, and other states and the Central government will soon follow. While Chief Minister Vasundhra Raje has given the reason of ‘15 lakh job creation’, the effects of this move is the exact opposite- increasing insecurity and joblessness.

     

  • India’s Abu Gharibs

    The custodial torture and death in Wadala Police Station is the latest to draw attention to the endemic practice of police torture.

    By Mansi Sharma,

    FOR the underprivileged in our country, police stations have become torture chambers. It would not be an exaggeration to compare them with Abu Ghraib.

    The pictures emerging from the cells of Abu Gharib – of wanton and indescribable physical and sexual abuse of detainees, shocked the world. Something not very dissimilar is happening in Indian police stations.

    On May 16, 2014, when the Supreme Court of India acquitted five of six men accused in Akshardham attack case, it drew attention towards coercive methods adopted by investigating agencies to extract confessional statements.  The Andhra Pradesh Minorities Commission-appointed Ravi Chander enquiry dwelt at length on the torture inflicted upon scores of Muslim youth following the Mecca Masjid blast on 2006. I remember, at a convention in Delhi some years ago, one of those tortured recalling the smell of burnt flesh in police custody, and then realizing it were his own lips smouldering from the electric shocks administered by the police.

    Images are for illustrative purposes only.

    Images are for illustrative purposes only.

    However, torture is not confined to terror investigations at all; indeed, it has become endemic and often seen as a quick route to ‘solving cases’. But even in this widespread culture of abuse and torture, the case of gross abuse of four young men at the hands of police at the Wadala police station manages to shake us.

    On the night of April 15, police picked four boys, Agnelo (Richie), Arbaz, Irfan and Sufiyan from their homes near Reay Road Police Station for the theft of gold chain and brought them to Wadala Police Station.

    They were not presented before the Magistrate, in violation of the law, till two days later. Though Arbaz was minor, he was kept with the other accused. Two days later, Agnelo died in police custody.

    Their affidavits submitted to the court describe the horror, abuse and indignity these boys were subjected to. In his written complaint, Irfan has said “my hands and legs were tied with a big rope and a big heavy iron rod was put between my folded legs on which I was hanged upside down. I was naked during this time. Mane and Kamble were assaulting me turn by turn with belt and the danda one by one. Then One Ganya officer holding the stick tried to insert the said stick into my anus but as the stick was thick it didn’t penetrate into my anus and so Mane and Kamble said that we have to spray petrol into his anus using a spray pump”.

    To read more click on post Title

  • 28 bonded labourers set free

    MIRPURKHAS, June 18: The Mipurkhas district and sessions court on June 17 set free 28 peasants, allegedly forced into bonded labour, after recording their statements.

    The peasants, including women and children, were recovered in a raid conducted by the Old Mirpur police on the farmlands owned by Anwer Marri and Jhando Marri.

    The raid was ordered by the court on an application filed by a peasant, Rewo Kolhi, who stated that his 28 relatives had been forced into bonded labour by the landowners.

    In his application, he stated that they had been kept in illegal confinement on the farmlands falling within the remit of the Old Mirpur police station.

    Mr Kolhi claimed that his relatives were not being paid their wages and faclities as per the Tenancy Act.

    On June 16, the police carried out the raid and recovered the peasants, who were kept at the Old Mirpur police station overnight.

    On June 17 morning, they were produced in the sessions court, which recorded their statement and set them free.

    Published by Daily Dawn on June 18, 2014

  • Protesting employees reject 10pc pay raise

    TIMERGARA, June 18: The government employees took to streets here on June 17 to reject the 10 per cent raise in their salaries, announced by the government in the annual budget.

    The protest was organised by local chapter of All Employees Coordination Council (AECC). The protesters demanded of the government to increase their salaries according to the price hike.

    The protesters, majority of them teachers, took out a rally from Balambat and marched on the road. Carrying banners and placards, they chanted slogans against the federal and provincial governments.

    The protesting employees gathered outside press club where they were addressed by AECC provincial chairman Syed Mohammad Shah, Abdul Khaliq, Mohammad Sadiq Jan, Mohammad Shaeer Tajak, Mohammad Salim, Zahid Khan, Wazir Mohammad, Haji Bahadar Syed and Zahir Shah.

    The speakers said that government employees were satisfied with the 10 per cent raise in their salaries. They said that keeping in view hike in prices of daily use items, raise in their salaries was not enough.

    They said that government made a fun of employees by increasing their salaries just by 10 per cent. The salaries of ministers and lawmakers were increase by 200 per cent, they added.

    They demanded of the government to increase their salaries according to price hike and abolish tax on salaries. They threatened to lock the government offices and educational institutions if their demand was not met.

    Published by Daily Dawn on June 18, 2014