Darjeeling: The Gorkha National Liberation Front, which is
looking at resurrecting its support base in the hills, has decided to
start from tea gardens.
The GNLF had recently dissolved at its
central committee, branch committees and all frontal organisations
expect for its garden workers' union and ex-serviceman association.
The
party, which is now part of Joint Forum- a conglomeration of 23 trade
unions apart from the TMC, is trying to take the lead on the issue of
fixation of minimum wages for tea garden workers.
The
Morcha's union, Darjeeling Terai Dooars Plantation Labour Union
(DTDPLU) is also part of the Joint Forum but they have preferred to lie
low within the front.
For the past few days, GNLF leaders, including J.B. Tamang, president of
Himalayan Plantation Workers' Union has been personally addressing gate
meetings in various tea gardens.
"Since August 1, our party has organised gate meeting at the tea
gardens situated in Manju, Phuguri Geille, Nagari, Dhajea and Chamong
where the president of the party's trade union, J.B. Tamang, was
present," said a GNLF leader.
Tamang said that the meeting was
organised after the July 30 meeting on fixation of minimum wages was
postponed to August 6 by the state government.
All political
parties are in support of minimum wages but the GNLF clearly seems to be
in the lead on this issues in the hills, knowing well that the it can
get huge political mileage on the issue.
More than 55,000
permanent workers apart from 15,000 temporary workers work in the 87
hill gardens that can sell their produce as "Darjeeling Tea."
In
the gate meetings, Tamang is taking the predominant Gorkha Janmukti
Morcha head on accusing them of working against the benefit of the
workers.
"Tamang is raising issues like non-compliance of 26 week
of maternity leave, delay in disbursement of gratuity benefits and has
accused the Morcha of collecting donations from the workers in the name
of 'fighting fund', "bonus fund" and to support Gorkhaland Personnel (a
wing of young boys and girls raised by Bimal Gurung) in his speeches at
the gardens, apart from working closely with the management against the
interest of the workers," said a GNLF source.
The allegations
against Morcha mostly pertain to the time when the party was under Bimal
Gurung. After a change of guard with Binay Tamang taking control of the
party, many functionaries of the Morcha's trade union, including its
president, has been changed.
"The GNLF is sensing an opportunity to connect with garden workers," said an observer.
The Telegraph
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