Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WORKERS’ DEMANDS DISCARDED LIKE TEA STAINS

Salary dispute in tea estates Estate workers betrayed after a long struggle Gazzette of CA still on hold

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Tea workers’ salaries are revised once in two years. The two-year Collective Agreement (CA) between Regional Plantation Companies (RPCS) and trade unions was to be renewed on October 15, 2018. The new agreement which was signed almost two weeks ago was not published as usual. Trade unions are critisisin­g the RPCS for depriving the tea workers of the attendance bonus and some other incentives when administer­ing a so-called increase in the basic salary. The gazetting of the CA follows months of stalled negotiatio­ns.

NEW AGREEMENT AN EYEWASH

The 1000 Movement is a collective of unions and grassroots activists who are keen on increasing the daily basic salary of an estate worker to Rs. 1,000. Duminda Nagamuwa of the 1000 Movement said that there is no such increment provided in the newly-signed agreement.

RPCS refused to accede to the tea workers’ thousand rupee wage increase demand and signed the Collective Agreement recently which saw the basic wage being increased from Rs.500 to Rs. 700.

According to the 2016 CA the basic salary of a plantation worker was increased to Rs. 500. Rs 60 a day was given as an attendance allowance, Rs 30 as a price share supplement and Rs 140 as a productivi­ty allowance. So, altogether the daily wage of a worker came to about Rs 730.

As per the new agreement, a worker gets a daily wage of Rs. 750 with a fixed share supplement of Rs. 50; which was Rs. 30 earlier. The other two key allowances including attendance allowance of Rs. 60 and Productivi­ty Incentive of Rs. 140 were terminated. “Now they have made the basic salary Rs.

700, removing the attendance and productivi­ty allowances. They have increased the price share supplement to Rs. 50 from Rs. 30, making the new overall daily wage Rs. 750. So, essentiall­y the daily net salary hike has been just Rs. 20. This is just an eye wash,” Nagamuwa complained.

GOVERNMENT’S RESPONSIBI­LITY

The meeting initially scheduled to be held on February 5 (Tuesday) with Tamil Progressiv­e Front (TPF), RPCS, Plantation­s Ministry and Labour Ministry to come to a settlement regarding the salary increase of tea estate workers had been postponed, State Minister and TPF representa­tive V.radhakrish­nan said.

Speaking to the Daily Mirror, he said the officials of the RPCS had not confirmed their participat­ion at the meeting. The TPF politician­s including ministers Mano Ganesan, V.radhakrish­nan and P.thigambara­m are insisting on crediting the productivi­ty allowance of Rs.140 to the basic salary. As a result of their objection, Prime Minister

Ranil Wickremesi­nghe had agreed to delay the issuing of the gazette notificati­on pertaining to increasing the daily wage of estate workers up to Rs.700. This was to allow negotiatio­ns to continue regarding the issue until a solution is found.

“If the plantation companies don’t agree with our demand, we need the government to intervene and contribute to the salaries of the workers. That is when we will decide whether to stay in the unity government or quit. The government also has a responsibi­lity,” State Minister Radhakrish­nan said.

TRADE UNIONS AND THEIR GENUINE PURPOSES

There are around five main trade unions operating in the estates including Lanka Jathika Estate Workers Union (LJEWU) and the Ceylon Workers’ Congress (CWC). These labour unions are closely aligned with political parties. At a time when the expenditur­e for food, health, education, transport and clothes questions whether the basic needs of estate workers are fulfilled, compared to other ordinary workers, every tea estate worker is supposed to pay Rs.150 per month as the contributi­on to the trade union the individual holds membership with. Even the Ceylon Teachers’ Union, one of the main trade unions in the country, charges only Rs.20 per month from every member.

Nagamuwa of the 1000 Movement said it is ridiculous as to how the so-called trade unions first give the consent to the agreement which was signed in their presence and later pose objections to the same agreement.

He opines that the issue is nothing, but a political agenda.

“How unfair and inhumane it is to snatch such an amount of money from salaries of tea workers and not do anything for their betterment? Ministers Thigambara­m and Mano Ganesan opposed this newly signed agreement not with the genuine sympathy for tea workers. It was because they thought they could gain political mileage out of this. As they have always been, they are just using the issues of their community for political gains. It is a betrayal of a long struggle,” Nagamuwa said.

‘GOVT. CAN’T TELL US WHAT TO PAY AND HOW TO PAY’

“With our new productivi­ty based wage model, workers earn as much as Rs.80.000 per month if they work harder,” said Employers’ Federation of Ceylon Plantation­s Group Chairman Roshan Rajadurai.

“There are many families that have more than one source of income and enjoy a monthly income that exceeds the minimum wage of a tea estate worker. They earn a considerab­le amount of money to support their daily expenditur­e through other income sources. For example, men in the estate sector work as constructi­on workers, three wheeler drivers and labourers in road constructi­on.

“The Government does not provide everything for these workers. If they are paying the salaries of tea workers, they can tell and do what they want. We are the responsibl­e party regarding the wages of the workers, therefore the Government cannot tell us what to pay and how to pay.

“If they really want to intervene, they can easily be a part of it and pay the workers. I don’t think the Government is in a position to do so because they are not even able to pay the EPF of the workers,” he said.

IS SRI LANKAN TEA RUNNING DOWN IN INT’L MARKET?

Tea is the second most excessivel­y consumed beverage in the world. However, planters claim that the Sri Lankan tea industry is experienci­ng a difficult phase in the internatio­nal market.

Rajadurai told the Daily Mirror that their plantation companies are running down.

“We cannot financiall­y afford to fulfill their demand for a daily wage of 1000 at this moment. We can afford to pay the salaries from what we earn. Our companies are running down in the market. The competitio­n in the internatio­nal tea market is high. Comparing with the tea workers in other countries, we have not even achieved 10% of their level of productivi­ty. These happenings have made an already bad situation worse. The internatio­nal prices are falling,” he said.

Despite him claiming that tea prices are falling, Colombo Tea Auction prices are not falling, but have been rising. The following table shows the tea average prices during every two years between 2012 and 2018.

The Daily Mirror also spoke to the Sri Lanka Tea Board Chairman Lucille Wijewarden­a to inquire about the current situation of Sri Lankan Tea in the internatio­nal market.

Wijewarden­a refuted Rajadurai’s statement that tea prices are falling. “Despite there being competitio­n in the internatio­nal market, Sri Lankan tea is not affected which is why tea prices have gone up without facing a threat at the moment,” he said.

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