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Tea garden worker - Dhaka Mirror https://dhakamirror.com/tag/tea-garden-worker/ Latest news update from Bangladesh & World wide Fri, 24 May 2013 06:15:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 https://dhakamirror.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/cropped-dm-favicon-32x32.png Tea garden worker - Dhaka Mirror https://dhakamirror.com/tag/tea-garden-worker/ 32 32 210058712 Tea garden workers demand pay hike https://dhakamirror.com/news/metropolitan/tea-garden-workers-demand-pay-hike/ Fri, 24 May 2013 06:15:01 +0000 http://www.dhakamirror.com/?p=52392 Workers of seven teagardens in the Sylhet city and its outskirts on Thursday observed a strike to push for a charter of demands that include forming a separate wage board for them and fixing Tk 300 as daily salary. About 7,000 workers of Malni Chhara, Hilua Chhara, Tarapur, Lobha Chhara, Noapara, Kalagol and Nun Chhara ... Read more

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Workers of seven teagardens in the Sylhet city and its outskirts on Thursday observed a strike to push for a charter of demands that include forming a separate
wage board for them and fixing Tk 300 as daily salary.
About 7,000 workers of Malni Chhara, Hilua Chhara, Tarapur, Lobha Chhara, Noapara, Kalagol and Nun Chhara teagardens under the banner of ‘Cha Shramik Sanhga’, a branch of Bangladesh Trade Union Sangha, staged separate demonstrations in the respective gardens on the day after boycotting their routine works, sources in the teagardens said.
Providing proper residential facilities and healthcare service for the workers and their families and setting up secondary level educational institutions in the garden
areas are among other demands of the teagarden workers.
Talking to New Age, Cha Shramik Sanhga Sylhet valley committee president Joy Mahatma Kurmi alleged that the leaders of two factions of the Tea Worker Union, who demanded Tk 120 and Tk 150 respectively as daily salary, were not working for the interest of the teagarden workers.
‘Actually, they are the agents of the garden owners and fighting to possess the Labour House for their own interest,’ Kurmi commented.
He said the agitated workers of seven teagardens agreed to resume working on Saturday as the garden authorities assured them of fulfilling the demands.
The assurance came from a meeting held between the teagarden managers and workers at Malni Chhara Teagarden at noon, sources in the teagarden workers said.
Tarapur Teagarden manager Ataur Rahman, Malni Chhara Teagarden manager Aminul Islam and its deputy manager Mahmud Hossain represented for the garden owners while SSS Sylhet Valley president Joy Mahtma Kurmi and general secretary Radhamoni Munda, Malni Chhara Panchyet Committee head Sakuntal Pradhan, Tarapur Tea
Garden head Sunil Mudi and its sectary Ranjan Mudi represented the workers in the meeting, sources present in the meeting said.
Being contacted, Malni Chhara Teagarden deputy manager Mamud Hossain confirmed the news of sitting with the workers representatives, but he declined to give the details of the decisions taken in the meeting.

-With New Age input

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Tea garden workers lack sanitation facilities https://dhakamirror.com/news/other-headlines/tea-garden-workers-lack-sanitation-facilities/ Sat, 19 Feb 2011 04:18:56 +0000 http://www.dhakamirror.com/?p=26969 Laxmi Rani Das, a physically challenged girl, has to walk almost a kilometre to find a secluded spot surrounded by bushes on a hilltop to respond to the call of nature. She usually takes her mother’s help in going out as she was born with only one leg. ‘We do not have any toilet. Most ... Read more

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Laxmi Rani Das, a physically challenged girl, has to walk almost a kilometre to find a secluded spot surrounded by bushes on a hilltop to respond to the call of nature.
She usually takes her mother’s help in going out as she was born with only one leg.
‘We do not have any toilet. Most people here cannot afford sanitation facilities due to lack of money,’ said Laxmi Rani, who lives in the state-owned Daldali Teagarden in Sylhet.
She said she had trained herself not to respond to the call of nature at night. Unlike many of the 3,000 people living in Daldali Teagarden, Laxmi Rani, a student of Class VIII, is aware of the importance of sanitation because she goes to a school outside the plantation.
Her mother Aroti Das, 50, once a teagarden worker, left the job to take care of Laxmi and her two sisters while her two brothers support the six-member family by working in the plantation. Her father died eight years ago.
The authorities of the state-owned teagarden provide quarters to the workers but, in most cases, without any toilet facility. As a result, the workers have to use the plantation and bushes on hillocks for the purpose of defecation and urination.
Many generations of the same families have live in the same houses in the tea estate. A worker here gets around Tk 48 a day and a weekly ration of three kilograms of wheat. There are more than 400 workers in Daldali Teagarden.
The situation is similar in other tea plantations.
Sylhet Public Health Engineering Department executive engineer Mohammad Hanif said neither the government nor the non-governmental organisations had come up with sufficient measures to ensure sanitation facilities for teagarden workers, one of the country’s underprivileged groups.
In his opinion, the government’s target to provide sanitation facilities to all teagarden workers by 2013 would not be achieved if large-scale programmes are not taken in the areas.
Hanif, however, said the authorities provided around 250 sanitary toilet rings every year to each union of the country free of cost, which had not even been utilised properly for setting up sanitary latrines.
Raju Guala, a community leader of Lackatoorah Tea Estate, another government-owned plantation, said most people did not like to use sanitary latrines as they felt more comfortable to defecate in the open. Some residents in the plantation even think, if they construct sanitary toilets, these will spread foul odour, he added.
Raju said, at most, 10 per cent of the residents of Lackatoorah Tea Estate, a home to around 1,000 families, had access to toilet facilities.
Habit is a big factor, observed Raju’s mother Behula, 60. ‘All the workers here are used to defecate in the garden or by the stream flowing from the hills,’ she said.
A number of teagarden workers told New Age
that with the meagre wages they earned they could hardly make both the ends meet, let alone set up sanitary toilets.
Lackatoorah Tea Estate manager Imdad Hossain said the workers were not accustomed to using latrines. ‘We are trying to motivate them not to defecate in the open. We, too, feel bad about it.’
He said the plantation authorities had a plan to bring the workers under proper sanitation coverage.
Sabita Karmi, a teacher at an NGO-run primary school at Lackatoorah which runs for four hours in the morning, said the one-class school having 27 students had no water-supply or any toilet facilities.
Women, girls, and the old suffer a lot due to the lack of toilets in the plantation, she said.
Dinesh, 40, a teagarden worker, however, said he had just built a sanitary latrine for his family with the support of an NGO.
Sylhet City Corporation mayor Badar Uddin Ahmed Kamran said he could not use any city corporation funds for constructing latrines for teagarden workers as the estates were outside his jurisdiction.
Sylhet Sadar upazila chairman Ashfaque Ahmed said the funds allocated for each of the unions under the upazila was so inadequate that they could not improve the sanitation facilities for the underprivileged community in the teagardens.
There are around 6,000 registered workers in 19 teagardens, including the private-sector ones, in Sylhet district, officials said.

 

Via: NewAge

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