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/ India News / 2007 / June 2007 / June 18, 2007 Mamata visits tea gardens hit by starvation deaths |
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Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee has asked the government to help workers of closed tea gardens, who are suffering from starvation.
Siliguri (West Bengal), June 18 : Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee has asked the government to help workers of closed tea gardens, who are suffering from starvation.
She said the government is avoiding responsibility by saying the deaths have been caused by malaria or diarrhoea.
The government says the deaths, which they have recorded to be around 570, are related to diseases, which are unrelated to starvation.
She also said that the gardens can be brought back to life if the government grants 70 crore rupees.
At least 700 tea workers have died from diseases linked with malnutrition over the past year after closure of tea estates left them with no income.
Two years ago, poor production and low yields led to the closure of 16 tea estates in Jalpaiguri, a remote part of West Bengal, leaving plantation workers with no means of income.
Investigations by the Supreme Court and tea workers' associations found this had directly led to the deaths, leaving hundreds more unable to feed themselves.
India, the world's largest producer and consumer of tea, has strong regulations in place to protect workers' rights and employees have powerful unions which often guarantee them free electricity, water and food as part of their salary packages.
But trade unions say estate owners did not pay wages and other arrears owed to workers following the shutdown and are now fighting the employers for compensation in court.
While tea estate owners are unwilling to comment on the closures, organisations representing the tea producers say they plan to reopen the estates under a cooperative plan.
As a result of the deteriorating situation, hundreds of former tea workers are being forced to travel across the border to Bhutan every day to work in the tiny nation's growing stone crushing and mineral factories.
Those who stayed back -- starving and weak with no money for the last two years -- are being forced to forage for food in nearby forests to keep themselves and their children alive.
ANI