Crippling Mumbai Train Strike Finally Ends


Mumbai, May 4 (IANS) A 36-hour strike by suburban train drivers that crippled India's financial capital ended Tuesday evening shortly after the authorities cracked down on the strikers for causing chaos but promised to back their demands for better working conditions.

Some seven million commuters who use the electric trains daily heaved a sigh of relief as Maharashtra's Home Minister R.R. Patil announced the end of the work stoppage after talks with union leaders.

Patil told reporters that the state government would take up the demands of the motormen, as the drivers are known, with the central Railway Board. Disciplinary action taken against the strikers would be withdrawn.

"We told them (motormen) that commuters were being inconvenienced unnecessarily. They placed their demands. I told them that the government would put forward their demands to the Railway Board," Patil said.

The drivers are demanding higher wages, including overtime allowances, and safety on the tracks.

Nearly 1,000 drivers launched the protest Monday with hunger strike. By evening, the number of trains, the city's lifeline, had thinned so steeply that hundreds of thousands were left stranded on streets.

As Tuesday dawned, Mumbai came to a virtual halt. Much of the city stood still. The few trains that still plied carried passengers packed like sardines, with many dangerously perched on the roof of the train coaches.

The situation was so bad that while Pakistani terrorist Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab's trial was the main story for television channels, the railway strike dominated Mumbai newspapers Tuesday -- although it was Mumbai that Kasab and the other terrorists had attacked.

The work stoppage, the worst Mumbai has seen since the railway strike of 1974, compelled the railways to issue a rare advisory Tuesday asking people not to commute unless it was a must.

Sensing the critical situation, Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan indicated he would take up the issue with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

But as protests by the motormen found an echo in the Lok Sabha, with MPs from Mumbai and Maharashtra creating a din, the state government announced it was invoking the Essential Services Maintenance Act (ESMA) to force the drivers to return to work.

In no time, police began arresting striking drivers, accusing them of preventing others from returning to work. After some 80 of them were taken into custody, Home Minister Patil opened conciliatory talks.

The railways earlier resorted to desperate - but insufficient - measures like permitting people to travel on long-distance trains on the same routes and making them halt at all suburban stations.

State-owned buses chipped in to help stranded commuters by deploying more buses in the city and elsewhere. Taxis and autorickshaws were in heavy demand.

Mumbai University said any student delayed for the 40-odd final examinations need not panic. They would be permitted extra time to write their papers.

Mumbai's train services cover the entire city and also link the adjoining districts of Thane and Raigad, helping millions to criss-cross efficiently in a city where time is immensely valued.

Officials said Tuesday evening that motormen had begun returning to work but the train services would become normal only close to midnight.

The trains on Central Railway and Western Railway networks account for 2,704 daily services. With with nine, 12 or 15 coaches, they transport the people from one part of Mumbai to another with clockwork precision.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Sameer, Hubli

    Wed, May 05 2010

    Nagesh stay away. When you enter your poisonous talk starts as if you are a God and wait for an opportunity to create a communal disharmony. If you do not know the subject properly please keep quiet. Clearly you are a poor reader & did not properly read what Antony Crasta wrote. He said "sufferers for the last 1 or 2 days." You went 1 step ahead to blame it on the Govt as if this issue was started recently. For your info, this is a very old topic even when your BJP Govt. was at the helm. There was no solution, so you think you can expect one with the current Govt a what.You must be honey-mooning. This matter fully falls under the jurisdiction of Railway Admin - Bombay Metropolitan Authority. Why are you concerned when you are in Bangalore? My retired uncle has served as a motorman in the Central Railways (suburban section) and says that this is not a major problem but the media and people like you have blown it out of proportion. Obviously if you deprive the long overdue remuneration who will lay down quietly.

    Past history shows that the railways never resorted to strikes without a cause, even if there was one they would still silently serve the nation with black badges worn (Japanese way) to vent their dissatisfaction. The railways are responsible exemplary and dedicated lot of employees not wanting to put any impediment on the general public, their services rendered to people of Bombay are professional. Ask any local commuter (from Bombay) they will vouch what I say.

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  • Patrick, Qatar

    Wed, May 05 2010

    Dear Mr. Antony, please wait, it's too early to predict anything at this juncture. It's not yet a win-win situation, and hopefully, only time will tell when is the right opportunistic moment. For the time being - it's only verbal talks. Let something work out concretely in black and white. This will THEN BE a real win-win situation.

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  • nagesh nayaK, bangalore

    Tue, May 04 2010

    HI, Antony Crasta, Mangalore/Sydney,Australia, THIS IS NOT WIN-WIN SITUATION BUT UTTER FAILURE OF YOUR UPA & STATE CONGRESS GOVT.   DO NOT APPRECIATE YOUR PARTY FOR DEBACLES.
    SINCE UPA IN CENTRE WE INDIANS ARE SUFFERERS & LIFE OF COMMON MAN & POORS ARE MISERABLE.  YOUR UPA IS A FAILURE IN ALL SEGMENTS & IN ALL FIELDS.

    JAI HO.

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  • Antony Crasta, Mangalore/Sydney,Australia

    Tue, May 04 2010

    Great news! - a win-win situation for the Railway Motormen, and the Railway Management as well, and most importantly, a great relief to the train commuters who have been the main sufferers for the last one or two days! It`s now up to the Home Minister of Maharashtra, Mr. R.R.Patil, to take up the genuine demands of the Drivers for better pay and working conditions with the Central Railway Board and ensure that they get a fair deal.

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