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Mill closure

It’s a blueprint to revive West Bengal’s jute mills: Oikyafront

| Updated: July 04, 2020 19:11:06


It’s a blueprint to revive West Bengal’s jute mills: Oikyafront

Jatiya Oikyafront on Tuesday urged the government to back off from its decision to shut down state-owned jute mills.

In a statement, the top leaders of the alliance also said the government’s decision seems to have been part of a blueprint for helping India reopen its dying jute mills in West Bengal by destroying Bangladesh's jute industry, reports UNB.

“Considering all the aspects, we strongly protest the government’s decision. We urge the government to move away from such a decision to close down jute mills. We express our solidarity with the programmes of jute mill workers seeking annulment of the decision.”

Gono Forum President Dr Kamal Hossain, BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, standing committee member Dr Abdul Moyeen Khan, Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal (JSD-Rob) President ASM Abdur Rob, Nagorik Oikya Convener Mahmudur Rahman Manna, Gonoshasthaya Kendra founder Dr Zafrullah Chowdhury, Gonoforum General Secretary Dr Reza Kibria and former Dhaka University Professor Nurul Amin Bepari jointly issued the statement.

On Sunday, Textiles and Jute Minister Golam Dastagir Gazi said the state-owned Bangladesh Jute Mills Corporation (BJMC) will be halting operations to stop its staggering losses.

He said around Tk 50.00 billion will be provided from the government budget in this connection  and all the arrears of 8,954 workers who retired since 2014 will be cleared, he said, adding that all the overtime dues, PF fund and gratuity - highest 27 per cent - will be paid to the present workforce numbering 24,886.

The Oikyafront leaders said some 51,000 jute mill workers--24,886 permanent and 26,0651 listed temporary and daily-wage-based ones--will lose jobs at this critical time of coronavirus if the government shuts the state-owned jute mills.

“This means a serious disaster is going to hit 250,000 people at least, including the workers and their family members. The decision comes at a time when several millions people are losing their jobs due to the dangerous onslaught by the coronavirus. The government is terminating people from their jobs instead of taking steps to create new jobs,” the statement said.

Referring to jute secretary’s assertion that the government had to incur a loss of Tk 106.74 billion over the last 48 years in the jute sector, the Oikyafront leaders said around Tk 520.00 billion has been handed over to some businessmen who are very close to the government as capacity charges without buying even a watt of electricity over the last 10 years.

 “The workers are not in any way responsible for the losses the country faced in the jute sector. The main reason behind the losses in the jute mills are corruption at the highest level of the administration and inefficiency like other public sectors. But the workers are now going to pay the price for that failure,” the statement added.  

Mentioning that the jute mill workers had to take to the streets to realise their arrears in different phases over the last few months, the Oikyafront top leaders said, “The so-called role model of development’ has left the salaries of its citizens unpaid for  months  after months. Now an extreme disaster has fallen on those workers.”

Though the government has declared that the jute mills will be run under public-private partnership (PPP) in the near future, they feared that finally the government will hand over the jute mills and all their assets to some people close it at a nominal prices. “There’s a logical reason to voice this apprehension   assessing the government’s pervious records.”

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