Key Points

Chennai sanitation workers are protesting for the 13th day against privatization, which has slashed their salaries. Opposition parties and trade unions have joined the demonstrations, condemning the move. Workers, many with over a decade of service, warn of worsening job security under private agencies. The GCC faces mounting pressure to reverse its decision.

Key Points: Chennai Sanitation Workers Protest Privatization for 13th Day

  • Workers protest salary cuts from ₹23k to ₹15k due to privatization
  • Opposition parties including AIADMK, BJP, and DMK allies back the protest
  • PMK and BSK cadres show solidarity amid police warnings
  • Trade unions demand GCC reverse privatization decision
2 min read

Chennai sanitation workers continue to protest against privatisation for 13th day outside Greater Chennai Coorporation

Chennai sanitation workers demand job security as privatization cuts salaries, supported by opposition parties and trade unions in ongoing protest.

"Our party has faced many cases before, and we didn’t fear them. – Murali Shankar, PMK General Secretary"

Chennai, August 13

Sanitisation workers in Chennai continued their protest on day 13, demanding job security and regularisation, on Wednesday.

They claim that privatisation has threatened their livelihood by reducing their salary from 23 thousand to just 15 thousand with few benefits.

Since day one, all opposition parties, including All India Anna Dravidian Progressive Federation (AIADMK), BJP and ruling DMK alliance parties like the communists and VCK, have supported the sanitary workers' protest.

On Wednesday, cadres of the Paatali Makkal Katchi (PMK) and BSK party met to show solidarity with sanitary workers who have been protesting outside the Greater Chennai Corporation office for 13 days.

"Police say those who come to support the sanitary workers' protest will be booked. Our party has faced many cases before, and we didn't fear them," said PMK General Secretary, Murali Shankar

"Here, sanitary workers are on protest for 13 continuous days. In the coronavirus time, these sanitary workers worked hard. The ruling party proves its ineptitude by the privatisation of sanitary works in Chennai," added the PMK General Secretary.

The protests erupted after GCC officials informed the NULM workers on July 31 that they would now have to coordinate with the private agencies. Matters escalated when sanitation workers on the morning shift reported for duty on August 1 and were denied entry.

In response, many of the NULM-affiliated workers, several with over a decade of service, have boycotted work and joined the demonstrations.

Multiple trade unions, including the All India Central Council of Trade Unions (AICCTU), Left Trade Union Congress (LTUC), Labour Progressive Union (LPU) have joined in on the protest, all of them expressing strong opposition to the privatisation drive. They have called on the GCC to immediately reverse its decision and ensure the job security and rights of all sanitation workers.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
While I understand the need for efficiency, cutting salaries by 35% is too harsh. These workers deserve dignity. Maybe a phased approach with proper training would be better than sudden privatization.
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Sarah B
As an expat living in Chennai, I'm shocked. Back home, sanitation workers have unions and proper benefits. India's 'essential workers' deserve better protections. Solidarity with the protesters!
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Vikram M
Typical political drama! All parties supporting now but none did anything when they were in power. Workers are just pawns in their game. Real solution needed, not just protests.
A
Anjali F
My uncle worked as GCC cleaner for 22 years. These jobs feed entire families. ₹8000 cut means children's education suffers. Govt should talk to workers directly, not through contractors.
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Karthik V
Chennai roads already stink due to garbage piles. Instead of fixing this, GCC creating more problems. Workers + citizens both suffering. When will our leaders learn? 🤦‍♂️

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