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Postal staff defer strike plan
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, MAY 1. Postal employees tonight decided to defer
their indefinite strike scheduled to begin tomorrow by 70 days
following an assurance from the Union Communications Minister,
Mr. Ram Vilas Paswan, to settle some demands within 90 days. The
assurance came after two rounds of hectic negotiations between
the unions and the Minister and his aides.
Earlier in the day, Mr. Paswan met the Union Finance Minister,
Mr. Yashwant Sinha, twice in an attempt to persuade him to accept
one of the key demands put forward by the three federations of
postal unions. Among others, the federations have insisted that
the Government regularise the services of over three lakh part-
time postmen, known in technical parlance as ``extra departmental
agents''. The unions want the Government to immediately implement
all positive recommendations of a committee which had examined
the service conditions of the ED agents, who man the postal
network in the country's hinterland.
Before deciding on deferring the strike, the union officials had
reiterated their decision to go in for the strike owing to the
Government's intransigent attitude towards ED employees for the
past several years.
The unions had gone on strike twice in the recent past pressing
these demands. On both occasions, the strikes were called off
after the Government assured them that it would sympathetically
look into the demands.
The unions are also pressing for revision of pay scales in
certain categories. This demand, it is expected, will enable them
to garner the sympathies of full-time postal staff in urban
areas.
Sources close to the Union Communications Minister said they
could not offer anything more than sympathetic consideration of
demands owing to the Finance Ministry's refusal to accept
regularisation of ED agents because such a move would entail a
huge outgo of additional funds. Moreover, regularisation of ED
agents would also entail a major increase in bureaucracy which
the Finance Ministry is in no position to sanction.
This was the position explained to the federations by Mr. Paswan
and senior postal officials both yesterday and today. The two
days of talks were preceded by an open appeal by Mr. Paswan to
the unions to defer the strike.
The three federations who have given the strike call are the
National Federation of Postal Organisations, the Federation of
National Postal Organisations and the Bharatiya Postal Employees
Federation.
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