Rediff Navigator News

Commentary

Capital Buzz

The Rediff Interview

Insight

The Rediff Poll

Miscellanea

Crystal Ball

Click Here

The Rediff Special

Meanwhile...

Arena

The Rediff Special

The bonus matter exposed the government's self-indulgence and lack of planning

H D Deve Gowda Ministers who didn't have problems of bonus payments -- Jalappa and Srikant Jena -- spoke up in favour of the finance minister. However, when port workers's demands were discussed, the telecom minister stayed quiet, because he knew his ministry would have to concede a similar demand; when the problem of paying railway workers arose then Indrajit Gupta sat quiet; and Ram Vilas Paswan sat quiet as a mouse throughout, because it was the railway workers whose demand for bonus created the maximum financial problems for the government.

On the day the strike broke, there was a whole lot of people ready to take credit. Sitaram Kesri rang up the prime minister and told him the bonus issue would be reviewed; and Srikant Jena brought Sitaram Yechury of the CPI-M to petition the prime minister to pay bonus.

The demands of telecom workers were outrageous: not only did they want 64 days bonus as against 52 days given to them last year, they also claimed that they had increased productivity. The telecom minister, Beni Prasad Verma, produced the figures: telephone department workers said out of 242,000 complaints, 189,000 had been cleared in 24 hours.

This was highly suspect and was questioned. How was this data arrived at? Chidambaram asked if there was even one member who could put his hand on his heart and say that he had dialled 197 and got the operator straightaway; and that if he hadn't had to listen to music, he would pay the bonus immediately.

Beni Prasad Verma He cited a hundred other consumer complaints which made nonsense of the claim that telecom employees had actually worked so hard that they deserved more bonus than they got last year. However, get their bonus they did.

H D Deve Gowda intervened, 'Twice the finance minister cautioned us and twice I ignored him. I should have listened to him,' he said. He described how he had dealt with public sector strikers in Karnataka - in that state, no government employee gets bonus.

The bonus matter was never resolved. But it exposed the government's self-indulgence and lack of planning. The same thing happened in the issue of India's defeat in the UN Security Council.

Sunday magazine

Continued
E-mail


Home | News | Business | Sport | Movies | Chat
Travel | Planet X | Freedom | Computers
Feedback

Copyright 1996 Rediff On The Net
All rights reserved