D Raja requests PM to intervene and withdraw the Essential Defence Services Ordinance 2021

CPI general secretary D Raja and Prime Minister Narendra Modi
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CPI general secretary D Raja and Prime Minister Narendra Modi

Highlights

CPI general secretary D Raja has written to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi requesting him to withdraw the Essential Defence Services Ordinance (EDSO) 2021 and to direct the defence ministry to hold direct negotiations with Defence Employees Federation

CPI general secretary D Raja has written to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi requesting him to withdraw the Essential Defence Services Ordinance (EDSO) 2021 and to direct the defence ministry to hold direct negotiations with Defence Employees Federation.

The EDSO 2021 provides for dismissal of the employees without even an inquiry. It calls for the imprisonment of any Union leader calling for a strike and any employee participating in the strike.

"I am very much shocked to know that the Honourable President of India has promulgated a draconian Defence Services Ordinance 2021, completely

banning strike in the Defence Industrial Establishments, thereby snatching away the constitutional, democratic and legal rights available the Defence

Civilian workers working in the Defence establishments including the 41 Ordnance Factories," Raja wrote.

He reasoned that employees and their Trade Unions resort to strike action as a last resort if all other means of protest /representation on genuine grievances are ignored by the employer.

In the present case the Ministry of Defence/ Government of India is the employer and the employees of 41 Ordnance Factories are protesting against the Government decision to splinter the Ordnance Factories into 7 Corporations.

"Their complaint is that this decision is taken in a hasty manner by ignoring all the previous agreements and assurances and also by abruptly closing the conciliation proceedings by the Chief Labour Commissioner (Central). Even the alternative proposals given by the Federations for further improving the Ordnance Factories in the Government itself is also ignored by the senior officials in the DDP, I doubt whether the above mentioned facts were brought to your notice before the Cabinet took the decision to splinter the Ordnance Factories into 7 corporations and promulgating the EDSO-2021," Raja further added.

He said that the Employees have got genuine grievances about the existence of these 7 corporations, since the government has already declared that PSUs will be privatised and in the strategic sector only four PSUs will exist.

The Government has already assured the Federations in writing that none of the Ordnance Factories would be closed. "Whether the Government still stands on this assurances, the Defence Minister has publicly announced that all the service conditions of the employees of Ordnance Factories would be protected," he asked.

"However, no official statement about the existence of Ordnance Factories, or whether all the 76,000 employees will continue to be Central Government employees/ Defence Civilian employees with all facilities and privileges available to them have been issued by the Government. Therefore, the employees and the Trade Unions are fully justified in calling for a strike, since they feel they have been ignored and that their future is in the dark. It is the responsibility of the Government as a model employer to call the Federations and enter into a negotiated mutually agreed agreement instead of crushing the democratic rights of the Employees," the letter read.

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