|
Jaigaon, Feb. 10: Three
gardens have been abandoned in the Dooars in the past 24
hours.
The 2,295 workers of
Dalsinghpara tea estate, 8 km from here, were left in the
lurch when the management fled the garden yesterday, the day
on which the workers were supposed to get their wages and
ration.
This is the third garden to be
abandoned yesterday.
On the plea that the liabilities
of Kalchini and Raimatang tea estates were far in excess of
what was mentioned in the agreement when they were bought in
November, entrepreneur Gopi Nath Das yesterday had ordered his
managerial staff to leave the gardens.
In Dalsinghpara, it was pay-day
yesterday and Rs 8.56 lakh was required to clear the wages.
Workers alleged that eight managerial staff members, who told
them that they were short by Rs 90,000, left the garden one by
one on the pretext of getting the deficit amount from the
bank.
The only person left was a
factory assistant, Suman Raina, who left the garden this
afternoon.
“I received a fax from our
head office in Calcutta today stating that payment will be
made to all workers barring the 429 who were served notices
for being absent from work on December 8 last year. However,
the workers’ union has rejected the offer,” Raina said
before leaving.
Manohar Tirkey, the secretary of
the Dooars Cha Bagan Mazdoor Union, said the garden was taken
over by the Calcutta-based LMJ International Ltd in June 2004.
“They had promised to clear the dues, but did not. As a
result, more dues have accrued since then. The workers have
not been paid four months’ wages, provident fund and
gratuity worth more than a crore,” Tirkey said.
He said despite issuing a notice
yesterday that wages would be distributed, the management made
a criminal offence by not paying up.
The deputy secretary of the
Dooars Branch of Indian Tea Association, Pranjal Neogy, said
he had no information on Dalsinghpara tea garden.
In the meantime, the management
of Kalchini and Raimatang tea gardens were absent from the
meeting convened today in Alipurduar by assistant labour
commissioner M. Saha.
“We have asked the assistant
labour commissioner to ensure that essential supplies are sent
to the two gardens,” said Rabi Mitra, the secretary of the
Citu-affiliated Cha Bagan Mazdoor Union.
|