The Mercury

Indians strike against retail giants’ entry

- Ben Sheppard

SHOPKEEPER­S, traders and labourers in India blocked railway lines and closed markets yesterday to protest against reforms allowing foreign retail companies such as Walmart and Tesco to enter the country.

Opposition parties and trade unions called the strike after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced a raft of reforms last week that are designed to revive India’s slowing economy, a move that has sparked a furious backlash.

Thousands of policemen were deployed in Kolkata in West Bengal state to prevent violence as shops, markets and offices shut down for the 24-hour strike.

“Train services have come to a halt across West Bengal as strikers squatted on railway tracks,” Samir Goswami, the regional public relations officer, said yesterday. Police said that protesters also blocked some national highways.

Activists from the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party and its allies gathered at railway stations across Bihar state in north India and forcibly stopped train services, leaving thousands of passengers stranded.

“Protesters have tried to target trains and bus stations and [we expect] they will also target shops and business establishm­ents,” said Ravinder Kumar, a senior police officer in Patna, the capital of Bihar.

All private schools in the state were closed because of the strike, but government schools and offices remained open yesterday.

The Confederat­ion of All India Traders forecast that 50 million people would participat­e in the protest against retail reforms.

Many small business owners and workers fear that the arrival of large-scale foreign supermarke­t chains will lead to drastic job losses as India’s supply chains and shopping habits are transforme­d.

Singh has been buffeted by reaction to the reform package and a sharp rise in diesel prices, with a key West Bengal-based coalition party quitting the government and demanding that the policies be reversed.

The arrival in India of chains such as Walmart, Tesco and Carrefour is expected to herald a consumer revolution, with shoppers moving from small, neighbourh­ood stores to large, out-of-town supermarke­ts.

The government and many industry leaders argue that a modern retail system would improve value and choice for Indian consumers, create new jobs and enable farmers to reduce wastage.

But Singh, weakened by the worst quarterly gross domestic product growth figures in three years and a series of corruption scandals, faces a major challenge to push through the reforms and boost the economy before elections due in 2014.

Truck and bus drivers around the country were also expected to strike over a 12 percent increase in subsidised diesel prices as the government tries to tackle its widening fiscal deficit. – Sapa-AFP

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors from the Samajwadi Party, a regional political party, shout slogans after stopping a passenger train during a protest against price hikes in fuel and foreign direct investment in retail, near Allahabad yesterday. Government reforms seek...
Demonstrat­ors from the Samajwadi Party, a regional political party, shout slogans after stopping a passenger train during a protest against price hikes in fuel and foreign direct investment in retail, near Allahabad yesterday. Government reforms seek...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa