LAHORE: A large number of sanitary workers on Thursday launched a massive protest for about seven hours against Lahore Waste Management Company and its contractor (Turkish companies) for ‘victimising’ them through various management tactics since merger of the City District Government Lahore’s solid waste management wing into LWMC.

According to the agreement, the CDGL had handed over its entire SWM assets to LWMC including 8,500 workers and machinery.

The workers led by Jharoo Mazdoor Union (Sanitary Workers Association) President Mushtaq Asi, General Secretary Pervaiz Naz and various minorities leaders including J. Salik gathered outside the Lahore Press Club and chanted slogans against the Punjab government for leaving them at the mercy of those who were treating them in an inhuman way.

The protesters blocked the roads leading to Simla Pahari.

Later, they marched towards Egerton Road at about 2pm and staged a sit-in near Aiwan-i-Iqbal till 7pm.

“Just look at workers. They clean the city daily, but no one wants to see them in clean clothes. It will only be possible, if they are given regular job,” Aslam Pervaiz Sahotra, a local minorities leader, told Dawn.

He said Wasa workers were entitled to medical cover at 21 designated hospitals. But in LWMC, no worker has such a facility.

He said supervisors were also involved in imposing heavy fines on their juniors for minor mistakes.

“If a worker comes to office slightly late, the whole-day salary is deducted. And if a worker goes on leave, salary for the entire leave period is deducted,” he said.

According to Pervaiz Naz, secretary general of the union, the LWMC while getting control of SWM had pledged to regularise all work-charged employees along with other benefits.

He said the contractor firms received Rs12,000 from LWMC against each worker’s salary, but Rs10,000 each were being paid.

He said LWMC did not pay them overtime for working during lunch timing and holidays which was mandatory under the law.

He announced that the protest would continue on Friday (today).

Published in Dawn, May 16th, 2014

Opinion

Editorial

Words that wound
Updated 18 Jun, 2026

Words that wound

Hate speech rarely begins with physical attacks.
‘New urban province’
18 Jun, 2026

‘New urban province’

CONSIDERING the advance state of urban decay that affects Karachi, voices are often raised calling for the megacity,...
Punjab budget: mixed bag
18 Jun, 2026

Punjab budget: mixed bag

PUNJAB’S budget for FY27 is a mix of good and bad political choices, with a cash-strapped centre tightening the...
Spoiler alert
17 Jun, 2026

Spoiler alert

AFTER the temporary peace deal between the US and Iran is physically signed in Geneva on Friday, an arduous process...
Storm-tested cities
17 Jun, 2026

Storm-tested cities

THE deaths caused by the latest spell of monsoon rains in KP and Punjab illustrate how quickly severe weather can...
Chakwal tragedy
17 Jun, 2026

Chakwal tragedy

A NINE-year-old girl is dead because a Punjab Crime Control Department gunman mistook her family’s car for a...