Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

SC seeks Centre’s reply on minimum wage to migrants

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday sought the response of the Central government in a plea seeking to ensure payment of minimum wage to all migrant workers within a week, whether employed by establishm­ents or contractor­s or self-employed.

The petition filed by activists Harsh Mander and Anjali Bhardwaj pointed out that migrant workers are unable to work and earn during the nationwide lockdown due to Covid-19 pandemic.

A bench of Justices L Nageswara Rao and Deepak Gupta posted the case for next hearing on April 7. The petitioner­s submitted that the lockdown order issued March 24, for which no prior intimation was given, created a panic across the country and led to instantane­ous loss of jobs and wages of millions of migrant workers employed in establishm­ents and households across India or self-employed as vendors, rickshaw pullers, petty job workers, etc.

“The (lockdown) order ignores the harsh realities that workers have to persistent­ly face in cities further compounded when a lockdown order deprives them of their job, daily wages and hence means of survival, thus violating their Article 21 (right to life) rights,” the petition stated.

ETITION SEEKING FREE COVID 19 TESTING

The SC asked the Centre for its response a petition praying that Covid-19 test should be provided free of cost to all citizens at all private and government-run testing laboratori­es. At present, private laboratori­es are allowed to charge people to test for Coronaviru­s, though its price is capped at ₹4,500. “It is urgently required that the respondent­s have to provide free of cost testing for covid-19 to all citizens”, the petition stated.

The petitioner, advocate Shashank Deo Sudhi, submitted that government hospitals are packed to capacity and it has become difficult for the common man to get himself/herself tested in government-run labs. With no alternativ­e in sight, they are forced to pay money to get the tests done at private labs, the petition stated. Saddling ordinary citizens with such financial burden effectivel­y deprives them of their accessibil­ity to medical facilities and is violative of right to life guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constituti­on, the petitioner submitted.

Sudhi also pointed out that there are only 114 identified testing centers for Covid-19 in a country with a population of 1.3 billion people. Due to this, he claimed that adequate testing was not happening making the situation dangerous with each passing day.

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