...
...
Next Story

Protesting daily-wagers cane-charged in Jammu, march foiled

The daily-wagers are on a protest since Friday, demanding the regularisation of their services. On Sunday, they extended their strike by another 72 hours.

Published on: Mar 24, 2025 04:29 PM IST
Advertisement

Police cane-charged protesting daily-wagers of the public health engineering (PHE) department and foiled their march to the civil secretariat in Jammu on Monday.

The daily-wagers are on a protest in Jammu since Friday, demanding the regularisation of their services. On Sunday, they extended their strike by another 72 hours. (HT file photo)
The daily-wagers are on a protest in Jammu since Friday, demanding the regularisation of their services. On Sunday, they extended their strike by another 72 hours. (HT file photo)

The daily-wagers are on a protest since Friday, demanding the regularisation of their services. On Sunday, they extended their strike by another 72 hours.

Raising slogans against lieutenant governor Manoj Sinha, chief minister Omar Abdullah and the BJP, the daily-wagers managed to breach the first layer of barricades near the MLAs’ hostel. They ran towards the secretariat but a posse of policemen prevented them from proceeding further. The protesters who succeeded in removing the concertina wires and barricades were lathicharged.

“We are fighting for our rights, our survival. We have families to feed,” said Inder Parkash, one of the protesters. Another daily-wager, Mohan Singh, said, “We supply water to people and see how we are being beaten up.”

Last week, chief minister Abdullah formed a high-powered panel headed by chief secretary Atal Dulloo to look into the issue of the regularisation of the daily-wagers engaged in government departments across the Union Territory. The committee has been given six months to come up with long-term solutions.

According to an estimate of the previous PDP-BJP coalition government that fell apart in June 2018, Jammu and Kashmir had 61,000 such workers engaged by various departments. To regularise them, the cash-strapped J&K government needed 1,925 crore annually.

 
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe