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KARACHI: PWU emerges victorious in Steel Mills referendum
The benefits that the PWU had promised included regularisation of contractual and daily wage employees, restoration of son’s quota in recruitments, introduction of pension scheme, plots for employees in Gulshan-i-Hadeed, abolishment of Hadeed Welfare Trust, medical facilities for self and family for life, etc. Other labour leaders who addressed the gathering of workers included Dhani Bux, Mustafa Zardari, Razi Haider, Saleem Soomro, Sattar Butt, Hameedullah and Mirza Tariq. Besides, the winning side has also planned a rally at the Hathora Chowk near the head offices of the Pakistan Steel Mills on Friday morning, after which a procession will be taken out that will go all the way to Bilawal House, where PPP leaders, including co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari, are expected to address the gathering. Commenting on the results of the referendum, the chief of the United Workers Front, Mohammad Mohsin, told Dawn that the UWF was not expecting anything else as the workers were fully aware of the fact that a union having the support of the government would be in a much better position to solve their lingering issues. The UWF chief said that his side had participated in the referendum to boost democratic norms. He said that the UWF would extend its support to the newly-elected CBA in its efforts to solve the various issues facing the workers of the mills. Mr Mohsin recalled that at the time of privatisation of the Pakistan Steel Mills, all the labour organisations had joined hands against the decision and had struggled against it and it was owing to their unity they had emerged successful in their mission. The referendum was held after a lapse of almost 13 years. The last referendum was held in 1995 in which the Peoples’ Workers Union was the CBA. After the completion of its two-year tenure, the United Workers Front had challenged it and the referendum was to be held, but one of the unions had approached the National Industrial Relations Commission (NIRC), which took around 11 years to settle the dispute and eventually, on May 22, 2008, the NIRC ordered that the referendum be held by June 15. As the unions had extended support at a later stage to the PWU, so the ballot papers – which had been printed earlier – carried names of all the unions and due to that very reason some of them also bagged some votes. These unions were Pakistan Steel Labour Union (five votes), Employees Unity of Pakistan Steel (16 votes), Pakistan Steel Democratic Front (five votes), Labour League of Pakistan Steel (one vote), Pakistan Steel Progressive Workers Union (30 votes) and Pakistan Steel Staff and Workers Union (two votes). Meanwhile, Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah congratulated the People’s Workers Union over its victory in the referendum.
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The DAWN Media Group
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