Saturday, September 27, 2008

Stepchildren Of Assam’s Pride

I’m lucky!” the Britisher had exclaimed upon discovering this prime patch for tea cultivation in Assam. This is how the Amluckie tea estate earned its name. However, luck was definitely not on the side of Sisul Tanti, a chowkidar of this garden owned by the Assam Tea Corporation Limited (ATCL). ATCL did not pay him Rs 1.15 lakh as Provident Fund (PF) dues, after deducting it from his salary throughout his service.For 12 years, Tanti suffered from diabetes but got only Rs 10,000 from his PF as an advance for treatment. When Tanti died on October 4, 2006, his, comprising his wife and his three minor children, got only Rs 20,000 of the total PF amount. Two years later, Tanti’s wife and children are still waiting for the remaining sum, which they should have received within 15 days.

Tanti’s family is not alone. Pohandia Tanti, a permanent worker of the garden died during the working period, but his family is yet to receive any compensation, gratuity or PF. In fact, no PF contributions from these workers have been deposited by the ATCL since 1998 under the Assam Tea Planters Provident Fund Scheme. Lakhon Kalindi, a permanent worker recalls a similar situation a few years ago when workers had to eat wild plants to beat starvation.

The once full-fledged hospital in the tea garden lies dilapidated, with no doctors or pharmacists. A health assistant at the hospital, who did not wish to be named, said: “We don’t keep indoor patients, nor do we have laboratory facilities.” They refer serious patients to the neighbouring towns of Nogaon, Samaguri and Tezpur. For common ailments, They hand out medicines from their stock.

In 1972, 759 tea gardens of Assam were declared sick. As many as 359 gardens were said to be in a bad condition. Of these, 15 were adopted by the government, which set up the ATCL to improve the plight of the workers.

However, what should have been ‘model’ tea gardens have, in fact, become the shame of Assam. Mismanagement, financial irregularities and incompetent administration in the 15 government-owned ATCL gardens have so ruined them that the workers are on the verge of starvation. These gardens, located in Golaghat, Jorhat, Sonitpur, Silchar and Nogaon districts, have been overburdened by liabilities.

Says Pallab Das, General Secretary of All Assam Tea Tribes Students’ Association (AATTSA): “These gardens should have been ideal gardens. But everything has failed including government sche mes like the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) and the Sarva Siksha Abhiyan. People here die of common ailments like diarrhoea, malaria and even gastroenteritis.”

The condition of the gardens started going from bad to worse in the late 1990s. In fact, the government has, from time to time, tried to review the state of affairs in these gardens. It set up an empowered committee in 2001 to suggest both short- and long-term measures for the revitalisation of the ATCL. The only recommendation of the committee followed was the selling of the ATCL office in Guwahati to meet salary requirements.


The situation is grim. Workers have been living without wages and rations for the past few weeks. “Workers face starvation and an acute water shortage. Most try finding work in the neighbouring brick kilns and construction sites,” says Krishna Tanti, an activist.

Ironically, the plight of these tea workers, brought to Assam as indentured labourers by the British, has not improved in independent India. Dipankar Banerjee, a historian at Gauhati University, says, “it is an example of lopsided economic growth that the workers who made a tremendous contribution to the state’s economy are dying of starvation.”

Even the wages in ATCL gardens are lower than in other gardens. Bhagirath Karan, Chairperson, Congress Tea Cell, says, “The workers in other gardens in Assam get Rs 54, but ATCL garden workers get Rs 48. They work for six days and get wages for only five days. Since October 2007, they have been getting single rations, but even that has stopped.”

The situation is so bad that while PF contributions have been deducted from workers’ wages, nobody bothered to give a statement of accounts at the office of the Assam Tea Planters Provident Fund scheme. “There are many who have retired and died without getting their PF money,” adds Karan.

Karan also adds that the Board of Directors has not been constituted for the past two years and everything is handled by the Managing Director. “There is practically no transparency in any financial dealings. Private companies have made a fortune using the same soil, climate and workforce,” he adds.

Many feel that in order to revive these gardens, extensions should be made in barren land and new ones planted. Among ATCL’s big liabilities are its high number of permanent workers and poor productivity. The yield per hectare is also much below the Assam average.

Pawan Singh Ghatowar, President, Assam Chah Mazdoor Sangh, says, “The government is not competent to run these gardens. It doesn’t have the expertise or the managerial know-how to operate the gardens. Liabilities have increased beyond the actual value of these gardens.”

He feels that a viable alternative has to be found to solve the livelihood crisis for the thousands of workers in the gardens. There are about 16,000 permanent workers, and 350 employees and dependents who have not been getting their legal dues including gratuity, PF, subsidised rations or minimum wages. “One solution could be to hand these gardens to big tea companies,” he says.
Realising that these tea workers are a substantial votebank, the government has announced a slew of measures by roping in the Public Health Engineering Department and the National Rural Health Mission to resolve the water and medical facility crisis. But like all government schemes, these relief measures will take time. Till then, basic amenities will remain a dream in these government-owned tea estates and the workers will continue to suffer in ignominy.

Finally, Dust of NU Mess Settles

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ice Chancellor of Nagaland University, Professor Kannan and NUTA leader Rosemary Dzuvichu shaking hands after the successful reconciliatory meeting at Kohima today.
The meeting was attended by the Naga Hoho and representatives of frontal civil organizations including the NUTA and NU officials. This photo was taken by Chief Secretary Lalhuma, who had chaired and convened the meeting on behalf of the State Government.

Dimapur, Sep 27 : Officials of the state government, Nagaland University, representatives of the NUTA and Naga civil society met today and decided on a number of affirmations to resume the institution’s long-defunct academic activities.
A joint statement was received here today where it was decided that the vice chancellor of Nagaland University shall, with immediate effect, revoke the suspension of eight members of NUTA and also drop the charges being framed against them in departmental inquiries.

All the members of NUTA are to resume their academic duties on the day following the revocation of the suspension orders against the eight teachers. The teachers are also to simultaneously withdraw their resignations from the various university councils, committees, departments as well as their demand for the removal of the VC, Registrar and the Controller of Examination.
The NUTA, the PGSU and the non-teaching staffers are to refrain from any form of agitation that could result in disruption of normal functioning of the university or academic classes in the campuses. All the grievances of the teachers, students and non-teaching staffers are now to be addressed to the university through a grievance cell, constituted by the university “within one week”.

The joint statement was appended by Nagaland Chief Secretary Lalhuma, VC Prof. K Kannan, president of NUTA Rosemary Dzuvichu, presidents of the PGSUs, and presidents and leaders of the Naga Hoho, Naga Mothers’ Association, the ENPO, NSF, ENSF, AWO, NSCF and ANCSU.

Interestingly, while the imbroglio in the university stood resolved with the intervention of the state government and civil society, hundreds of post-graduate students continued with their peaceful office-picketing of the university head office today.

As the joint meeting began at 1 PM in the Chief Secretary’s conference hall, the agitating PGSU students were seeing anxiously waiting for the outcome of the meeting, in uncertainty. However, as the long wait drew to an end at around 4.30 pm with news on the successful outcome of the meeting trickling in, jubilant students were heard singing “we shall overcome”. Of course, some could be seen taking a playful jibe or two at the withdrawing Fire and Police personnel who were deployed at the site of the agitation.

During the joint meeting, it was learnt that various speakers had fired salvos both at the Vice Chancellor and also the NUTA for the imbroglio. Some of the speakers, it was said, had also lashed out at the vice chancellor with allegations of fuelling the problem on tribal and communal lines.

North East girls caught in sex racket? Govt orders probe

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ew Delhi, Sep 26 : The government has ordered an inquiry into reports of girls from the northeast being trafficked to Malaysia for sex work. NGOs claimed that as many as 150 girls were reported to have been promised jobs in Singapore but landed up in clubs in Kaula Lampur instead.

The ministry of overseas Indian affairs (OIA) has ordered an inquiry into the reports. “I am looking into the matter. We have also alerted our embassies in Singapore and Malaysia,” Vayalar Ravi, OIA minister said. The minister has directed the Protectorate of Emigrants (PoE) officer to track records on the basis of which these girls were taken.

Complaints were received from Naga Peoples Movement for Human Rights (NPMHR) and Shakti Vahini regarding trafficking of girls from Zeliangrong community in Tamenglong district in Manipur. The two NGOs were alerted after three girls escaped from their traffickers in Malaysia and were rescued by a priest. He, in turn, got in touch with NPMHR, Unifem and Shakti Vahini.

Shakti Vahini’s executive director Ravi Kant said, “This information only hints at what could be a larger racket of human trafficking from the N-E.” While details are not forthcoming, NGOs said that a Singapore-based group was recruiting girls not just from Manipur but Guwahati, Kolkata, Dimapur and Shillong. NGOs also claimed that five girls on their way to Singapore were intercepted and rescued at Dimapur recently.

The N-E has emerged as a source-transit-destination point for trafficking of women and children. The region’s proximity to the country’s porous borders has made human trafficking from Nepal and Bangladesh easy while girls from Manipur, Nagaland and Assam find their way to Delhi, Mumbai and southeast Asian countries.

Human trafficking, coupled with trafficking of drugs and arms, has left the entire region in turmoil and internal strife. Concerned over the increasing number of fake recruiting agencies, the ministry has planned to strengthen the Emigration Act that will allow authorities to take stringent action against fraudulent agents. The amendments to the legislation are in the pipeline.

Manipur Rural Bank, the latest target of militants in Manipur

Imphal, Sep 26 : It looks as if the militants in Manipur cannot differentiate between those who try to control them and the ones who are just devoted to the service of common man.

The recent victim of militants belonging to the banned outfit Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL) was Manipur’s rural bank. The militants forced the bank to close down for an indefinite period while making the hapless staff of the bank go for a sit in demonstration against widespread militant activities.
Manipur Rural Bank has 18 branches throughout the state. It works for the uplift of the rural masses.

The militants demanded a sum of one million rupees as ransom money from the bank and threatened the bank’s staff with dire consequences if they failed to pay up.

The staff turned furious and expressed their anguish in Keishampat asking the militants to withdraw their demand. B.Bimal Singh, Branch Manager, Porompat MRB Branch, said: “For the last few months some underground groups were demanding money from our bank. Earlier, we requested many times through media not to demand any monetary demand from us. We are a very small bank and this is the only Rural Bank in Manipur and we are serving the poor people. And the under grounds have demanded a huge sum of money.”

L. JoyKumar Singh, Employee, MRB, said: “We are sending a message to them that we are fed up of such type of demands and please let us work in peace for the sake of the people.” Manipur Rural Bank one of the premier banks of Manipur, and has more than 30,000 depositors.It is concerned with the welfare of the rural masses and most of its depositors are from rural areas of the state.

Raghumani Singh, Branch Manager, MRB Kongba Bazaar, said: “Actually we are serving the poor people of my locality. So, such kind of demand we never expected. If such kind of demand is made very frequently in the presence of our local people than it will affect our business to a greater extent. So, I would like to appeal anybody any organization not to make any sort of demand like this.”

This is not the first instance that the militants have targeted a bank. Earlier this year, the United Bank of India in Imphal as well as some other banks in other parts of Manipur were under attack by the militants.

Even the UBI was forced to close down for indefinite period following a hefty monetary demand.

No doubt those who claim to fight for the interests of the people of the state are the real road blocks in the development of the resource rich state.