Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
India

Britain faces mass strike by public sector workers

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Jul, 2014 11:52 AM
    Britain is witnessing one of the biggest strikes by public sector employees in three years with up to one million people expected to take to the streets to protest pay freeze and pension changes as part of austerity measures, media reports said Thursday.
     
    Union leaders said more than 50 marches and rallies were organised across England and Wales Thursday, the Guardian reported. 
     
    Health workers and civil servants are joining teachers in the mass demonstration against the austerity measures. 
     
    Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison, representing many of the country's lowest paid workers, told the BBC: "Something has got to give -- enough is enough.
     
    "We've got 300,000 now on zero-hour contracts, we've got a million workers in local government earning below the living wage that (Conservative Party leader) Boris Johnson and others talk about, and people are saying: 'We cannot go through another three years of this pay restraint'."
     
    The National Union of Teachers (NUT) says more than 20,000 teachers could take part with nationwide rallies and pickets planned for towns and cities ranging from Cambridge, Leicester, Swansea, Torquay and the Isle of Wight, the Independent reported.
     
    The British government implemented a public sector pay freeze for two years from 2010-12 and has subsequently imposed a one percent pay cap, meaning some of the lowest paid workers have seen their income fall in real terms for more than four years.
     
    The result of a Trades Union Congress research Wednesday showed that since the coalition government led by Prime Minister David Cameron took office, local government workers, teachers, firefighters, civil servants and other public servants were on average 2,245 pounds worse off in real terms.
     
    However, the government has downplayed the extent of the strike.
     
    "The vast majority of dedicated public sector workers did not vote for today's action, and early indications are that most are turning up for work as usual. We have rigorous contingency plans in place, services appear to be working well and we expect most schools and job centres to open their doors," a Cabinet Office spokesperson was quoted as saying by the Guardian.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    CBI arrests two civic officials for taking bribe

    CBI arrests two civic officials for taking bribe
    The CBI Tuesday arrested two officials of Delhi's civic agency MCD after they were caught taking bribe.

    CBI arrests two civic officials for taking bribe

    Chandigarh's Public Toilets in Corruption Stink

    Chandigarh's Public Toilets in Corruption Stink
    The allotment of tenders for maintenance and advertising of these public toilets is now raising a multi-crore stink, with the city's civic body and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probing the whole affair. 

    Chandigarh's Public Toilets in Corruption Stink

    UN's Pillay seeks peaceful solution to Ukraine crisis

    UN's Pillay seeks peaceful solution to Ukraine crisis
    The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay Tuesday called on all sides to make greater efforts for a peaceful resolution of the Ukraine crisis.

    UN's Pillay seeks peaceful solution to Ukraine crisis

    20 die of cholera in Nigeria

    20 die of cholera in Nigeria
    At least 20 people have died in a cholera outbreak in Nigeria's Plateau state, hospital officials said Tuesday.

    20 die of cholera in Nigeria

    Muslims need quotas to become better-educated, employed: Rahman Khan

    Muslims need quotas to become better-educated, employed: Rahman Khan
    Minority Affairs Minister K.Rahman Khan Tuesday backed giving reservation to Muslims, saying the community suffers from lack of education and scant represenation in government services.

    Muslims need quotas to become better-educated, employed: Rahman Khan

    RTE Act valid, but not for minority schools: SC

    RTE Act valid, but not for minority schools: SC
    The Supreme Court Tuesday, while upholding the validity of the Right to Education Act, 2009, said that it was not applicable to the aided or unaided minority schools.

    RTE Act valid, but not for minority schools: SC