The Wazirpur Industrial Estate workers claim they have been exploited
For several years, nearly 1,000 workers at 24
hot-rolling steel plants in the Wazirpur Industrial Estate worked
12-hour shifts under inhuman conditions. They toiled day-in and day-out,
without a single day off. But then in February last year they went on
strike and forced the factory owners to concede to a weekly holiday on
Wednesdays.
Since then, the workers have been
demanding minimum wages, job cards certifying them as bona fide
employees and enrolment in the Employees’ State Insurance (ESI) scheme
which will provide them a measure of health care coverage.
After their demands evinced no response, these workers banded together again this past Wednesday and struck work.

With
furnaces not firing at these hot-rolling factories – where iron blocks
are converted into steel – hundreds of other factories in the area are
also in danger of shutting down. The steel from the ancillary
hot-rolling plants is the raw material used to manufacture steel
utensils and other appliances. And the striking workers claim that
stocks of raw steel are rapidly dwindling.
Rajeshwar
Singh, a mason, has worked in the hot-rolling plants for 10 years now.
“While masons get Rs.8,500 monthly, helpers are paid Rs.6,000. We work
12 hours daily, but don’t get overtime wages. Yesterday, the proprietors
tried to mollify us with a Rs.1,500 hike but that is still not at par
with the minimum wages. When we take leave, we forego our pay,” rues
Rajeshwar.
The extreme heat spawned by the furnaces
forces the workers to take half-hour breaks and makes them
sickness-prone. “For every half-hour we work, we have to rest for
30-minutes to recoup our strength. Every worker drinks one bottle of
water every hour. In the summer, it gets even worse,” says Babloo
Prasad.
On Monday, the workers staged a protest
outside Deputy Labour Commissioner S. C. Yadav’s office at Nimri Colony
in Ashok Vihar. Mr. Yadav has marked the workers’ complaints to a Labour
Inspector to investigate. On Wednesday, labour officials will meet both
workers and proprietors to chalk out a compromise.
Mr.
Yadav told the workers that his office can only take up their denial of
minimum wage grievance. “For the absence of your name on muster rolls,
you will have to complain to the Factory Inspectorate at 5 Shamnath
Marg. For the failure to be enrolled in the ESI scheme, the complaint
rests with the Central Government under which the ESI Corporation
comes,” he told them.
The protesters claim that each
hot-rolling plant has between 30 and 40 workers. The Factories Act
defines a factory as a unit which has 10 employees working with the aid
of power, or 20 employees working without the aid of power.
Community
organiser Raghuraj and the workers he has helped band together have a
tough choice to make in the days ahead – the lengthy bureaucratic
process of filing complaints, waiting for an inquiry and official
action, or the difficult and uncertain path of pressuring owners to
concede to their demands by continuing the strike.
With
the shadow of police action hovering over them, Rajeshwar says: “We are
not scared of anyone anymore. We have been exploited for far too long.”
Source: http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Delhi/workers-steel-for-a-better-deal/article4622743.ece
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