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Planter association’s efforts to extend the existing agreement is totally unacceptable – Mano Ganesan

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Planter association’s efforts to extend the existing agreement is totally unacceptable – Mano Ganesan

Sunday, 24 February 2013
“Plantation employers federation representing the plantation management companies is pushing efforts to extend the current collective agreement which is reaching expiration end of March. This stance is totally unacceptable to us. Such unilateral attitude will create economical turmoil in the all important plantations industry ” warns Mano Ganesan, president of the recently launched plantation trade union federation (PTUF).
Ganesan speaking to media on the issue said further;
Employers federation chairman Lalith Obeysekara tends to put all the blame on the wage increase given in the existing collective agreement and points at the cost of production.
The current wage was agreed two years ago. The rupee has been devalued since then. It has helped the export sector, primly the plantation companies.
Mr. Obeysekara is speaking about the daily wage, which is Rs. 515-00. He is also comparing the cost of production with India and Kenya. The Rs. 515 per day wage is only in the agreement papers. Large segment of poor plantation workers do not receive this stipulated daily wage. It is only the theory. Besides the employers’ chairman should consider serious reforms to bring down the extravaganza management costs. These costs are a major component in the ‘cost of production’. He should send his team of managers to India and Kenya on a study tour.
Mr. Lalith Obeysekara says that they have started the discussions. We do not know if they have started talking to CWC or with the government. I call upon him to talk to the government on the cess on exports. If the cess is brought down to the minimum it would be in the interests of employers and the workers. It will help the industry too.
Our PTUF is not a party to the collective agreement. But we are the frontline stake holders as we hold the largest segment of the poor plantation workers today. We will continue to monitor the process. We will not hesitate to go for trade union action, if necessary.

Constitutionally incorrect to hang Rajiv killers now, says Judge

SUNDAY, 24 FEBRUARY 2013 
CHENNAI: It would be ‘constitutionally incorrect’ now to hang the three people sentenced to death in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, said Justice K T Thomas, who headed the Supreme Court bench that confirmed the death sentences. “It was my misfortune to have presided over that bench,” he told TOI.

More than 13 years ago, it was a three-judge bench headed by Justice Thomas that confirmed death sentence for Nalini Sriharan, Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan. Nalini’s death penalty was commuted to imprisonment for life by Tamil Nadu governor in April 2000 on the basis of a recommendation of the state cabinet and a public appeal by Sonia Gandhi. The TADA had originally awarded death sentence to all the 26 accused persons. When the matter reached the Supreme Court, which was the only appellate forum under theRajiv Gan as a referred trial, capital punishment was confirmed only for four.

In an interview, Justice Thomas said the judgment itself had ‘errors’ as the death sentences had not considered the antecedents, nature and character of the accused. Hence any decision to hang the three could now be termed as ‘constitutionally incorrect’ and a violation of Article 21 of the Constitution, he told TOI. Going a step further, the judge said case deserved a review, considering the antecedents and character of Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan.

“At a time when the Supreme Court bench headed by me pronounced judgments in Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, apparently, we did not consider the nature and character of the accused who were sentenced to death penalty by us. It was only many years thereafter a bench headed by Justice S B Sinha pointed out that without considering the nature and character of accused, a death sentence should never be awarded. His judgments mentioned errors in previous SC judgments and that applies to Rajiv Gandhi assassination case,” he said.

Also, he pointed out the three have been in prison for 22 years. “For any life imprisonment, every prisoner is entitled to have a right to get his case reviewed by the jail authorities (to determine) whether remission can be announced or not. Since the accused in Rajiv Gandhi case were death convicts, they underwent a long period of imprisonment without even having the benefit of life imprisonment,” he said. “This appears to be a third type of sentence, something which is unheard and constitutionally incorrect. If they are hanged today or tomorrow, they will be subjected to two penalties for one offense.”

In 1999, Justice Thomas had agreed with two others on the bench in respect of death penalty for only Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan. As for Murugan’s wife Nalini, he gave a dissenting, but minority, verdict preferring imprisonment for life.

When TOI contacted Justice V R Krishna Iyer, former judge of the Supreme Court, he said death penalty could not be considered as a punishment. “It is just another act of murder, a judicial murder, by the state. It is high time for India to abolish death penalty and India has not gained anything from death penalties in the past,” he said.

The three death convicts have completed almost 22 years of imprisonment. Their execution, which was scheduled to be held on September 9, 2011, was stayed by the Madras high court for six weeks in August that year. The case has since been transferred to the Supreme Court, to be decided after the Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar case verdict is delivered.

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