Health Workers in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir Gear-Up For Elections

Jammu Kashmir:

Health Workers Gear-Up For Elections… After Seven Years!

HEALTH WORKERS in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK) – numbering nearly 10,000
out of 80,000 public sector workers – are organised by the Azad Jammu Kashmir
Paramedical Staff Association. They include dispensers, health technicians,
medical assistants, cleaners, catering staff, etc.

CWI supporter, Kotli, POK

After more than seven years, health workers in the district of Kotli,
following a bitter struggle with the present (appointed) right-wing leadership
of PSA, have succeeded in getting agreement from the union leadership to hold
elections for the district and sub-division level of the union on 28 September
2004.

The present district leadership of the PSA has failed miserably to defend
the rights of their members. Workers in the health department continue to face
multiple problems, from huge accommodation problems, understaffing, all new
recruitment on a contract basis, long hours over and above the eight-hour
shift, and an anti-worker law ie the Special Powers Act.

For the first time since the 1994 defeat of the PSA strike an informal
meeting of nearly 100 workers decided to hold elections. A 15-member committee
was formed taking three members each from all sub-divisions. A district
elections commission was also formed with the approval of the committee.

There are thousands of young health workers employed in the private sector
without any rights. Hospital bosses are paying them below the so-called
minimum wage of Rs:2,500 a month (£25 a month) on a contract basis, with no
pension rights etc. At the same time these workers have not been organised
into trade unions.

In Kotli, where there are around 500 private sector health workers, PSA
members have made contact with them for future PSA membership.

Many rank and file members have expressed sharp criticism of PSA
leadership, for not holding elections which are due every two years, hiding
the constitution of PSA from the members, and generally colluding with
hospital management against the interests of the membership.

After the announcement of the election schedule, two panels have come
forward; ‘Workers Unity’ panel (election symbol = red rose) and a right-wing
panel led by the previous leadership (election symbol = moon).

The Workers’ Unity panel comprises of majority of health workers who have
been disgusted with the previous leadership and have struggled to get
re-organised and have campaigned for democratic elections.

On Monday 13 September, the last day of submitting of the nomination
papers, nearly two hundred Workers’ Unity panel members and their supporters
marched through the town and went to the election commissioner at the District
Health Office.

Talking to Socialist Liberation (paper of CWI supporters, Kashmir), a
cleaner working in the DHQ hospital (150 beds) which caters for a population
in the local district of over 600,000, said: "We have been employed in the
hospital for 17 years and every time our trade union leaders have betrayed us.
Now we are contesting this election to struggle for our rights".

The total failure of the DHQ hospital management over the years has led to
an acute crisis. There is no hospital intercom let alone proper telephone
exchange, and air conditioners in different wards have either been stolen or
used by senior hospital management. Appalling conditions exist in the
hospital, particularly in the family ward.

Workers in health and other public sector departments continue to face
anti-working class policies of the present ruling right-wing government led by
the Muslim Conference, who are a rubber stamp for general Musharraf’s regime.