A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, June 5, 2014
Striking Holcim workers in Sri Lanka occupy cement plants

Thursday 05 June 2014
Sri Lanka: Nearly 500 contract workers at two Holcim
Lanka cement plants in the towns of Puttalam and Galle in Sri Lanka have
been on strike since 19 May 2014 demanding job permanency, better wages
and improved working conditions. The striking workers and their
families are occupying the cement plant premises. The Inter Company
Employees Union (ICEU) called the strike.
The protesters at the Puttalam plant have blocked the main gate, halting
the transport of cement. The company and contractors are trying to
break the picket with the help of Sri Lanka's president Mahinda
Rajapaksa. The government is determined to end the strike and has
deployed police and the riot squad. The police are threatening to arrest
union leaders and activists.
On 1 June 2014 the striking contract workers and their families at the
Puttalam and Galle plants were attacked by hired thugs with swords and
clubs, allegedly organised by the local ruling party politicians. At the
Puttalam plant nine people, including an eight year old girl, were
injured and sent to hospital. Four are still hospitalised. Protestors
asked for police protection, who were present during the attack, but
their appeals were allegedly refused. At the Galle plant one protester
was injured.
The mother of the eight year old girl who was injured said that her
daughter had been thrown to the ground by the thugs. "I'm afraid for my
husband, who has been working for eight years as a contract worker.
That's why we joined the protest."
Holcim established its Sri Lankan operations after the privatisation of
the state-owned Puttalam Cement Corporation in 1996 under former
president Chandrika Kumaratunga. After Holcim took over, the workforce
was cut from 1500 to less than 900, with only 370 permanent workers.
Some of the contract workers have worked for the company for more than
20 years. Keeping workers on contract basis is a means employed to deny
the rights they would have as permanent employees and to subject them to
harsher working conditions.
Workers in the production and transport sections are employed on a 12
hour shift system. Their basic monthly wage is less than US$115. In the
loading section, six workers have to load 4500 cement bags during a 12
hour shift with the assistance of a conveyor belt. The workers on
'general duties' work nine hour shifts and are on daily wages of
US$16.02.
Holcim Lanka dominates has more than 40% of the local market. In the
recent period, it has increased the price of a 50kg bag of cement
several times and profits have soared, even after paying the
government's increased taxes.
