Jump to content

All India Trade Union Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AITUC
All India Trade Union Congress
Founded31 October 1920 (103 years ago) (1920-10-31) at
Bombay, Bombay Presidency, British India
HeadquartersAITUC Bhavan, 35-36, DDU Marg, Rouse Avenue, New Delhi - 110002
Location
Members
14.2 million (2013)
Key people
Amarjeet Kaur (General Secretary)
Ramendra Kumar (President)
Binoy Viswam (Working President)
AffiliationsWFTU
Websiteaituc.net
Collectorate March by Toddy Workers Body affiliated with AITUC at Alappuzha

The All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) is the oldest trade union federation in India. It is associated with the Communist Party of India.[1] According to provisional statistics from the Ministry of Labour, AITUC had a membership of 14.2 million in 2013.[2][3] It was founded on 31 October 1920 with Lala Lajpat Rai as its first president.[4]

In Bombay by Lala Lajpat Rai, Joseph Baptista, N. M. Joshi,[5] Diwan Chaman Lall and a few others and, until 1945 when unions became organised on party lines, it was the primary trade union organisation in India. Since then, it has been associated with the Communist Party of India.

AITUC is governed by a body headed by National President Ramendra Kumar and General Secretary Amarjeet Kaur, both the politician affiliated with Communist Party of India. "Trade Union Record" is the fortnightly journal of the AITUC.[6]

AITUC is a founder member of the World Federation of Trade Unions. Today, its institutional records are part of the Archives at the Nehru Memorial Museum & Library, at Teen Murti House, Delhi.[7]

History

[edit]

Background

[edit]

The beginning of the labour upsurge against oppression and exploitation goes back to the second half of 19th century, with the emergence of class of casual general labour during British Raj in India. The self-sufficient Village economy was shattered with no new structures in place, creating impoverished peasantry and landless labour force.

The dumping of cheap industrial goods resulting in millions of artisans, spinners, weavers, craftsmen, smelters, smiths, potters, etc., who could no more live on agriculture also turned into landless labourers. This led to widespread famines in India through the period from 1850 to 1890 resulting in deaths of several lakhs and also reducing millions as beggars.

The anguish of impoverished masses, ruined peasantry was up in revolt which resulted in several movements even though crushed by the rulers. This background did help the 1857 revolt by princely states and the common masses against the disempowering policies of British rule.

Till this time trade unionism was not known to workers, they were reacting to extreme exploitative working conditions and very low wages. They formed themselves as 'jamaats' which were based more on social caste basis in order to fight back oppression of employers. This was beginning of organization by the workers even though not the trade unions in essence.

From 1905 onwards there was notable advance in the working class actions and it was more and more closing its ranks with the advance of freedom struggle in the country.

A strike took place in Bombay against extension of working hours. The printing press workers in Calcutta also struck work. Another great event of the period was strike by industrial workers of Bombay from July 24 to 28, 1908, in protest against the pronouncement of judgment sentencing six years imprisonment to freedom fighter Bal Gangadhar Tilak. There were street fights between workers and police and military of British rulers.

Lenin wrote about this strike, "The Indian proletariat has already matured sufficiently to wage a mass struggle, class conscious and political, and that being the case, Anglo- Russian methods in India are played out".

This also needs mention here that the Factory Act established in 1881, was promulgated in the background of competition being provided to British Companies by goods produced in India due to availability of cheap labour and long working hours.

Even then it was only for the industry where competition to foreign industrial goods was posed. It was amended several times within a short period of few years. It was blessing in disguise as regards working hours and weekly holiday etc. but the wages and working conditions continued to be pathetic. In seasonal industry no changes were brought about as it did not impact the competitiveness to British Industry.

The October Revolution in 1917 in Russia during First World War was a great impetus for Indian labour movement as the working class along with peasantry captured power first time in the history of mankind.

In 1918 great strike in cotton mills of Bombay started and soon it spread to other areas with 1,25,000 workers participating by January 1919. The strike against Rowlatt Act had great impact on the national struggle itself. In the first half of 1920, there were 200 strikes involving 15 lakh workers. The demands were for 10 hrs working and dearness allowance. Out of 97 strikes during July to December 1920, only 31 ended in failure. In all other cases there were successes to some extent.

It was in this heroic background that the preparations began on July 16, 1920, when a convention was held in Bombay which decided "to hold All India Trade Union Congress in Bombay". A reception committee with 500 members with Joseph Baptista as chairperson was formed.

Formation

[edit]

The founding conference began on October 31, 1920, in Empire Theatre Bombay with Lala Lajpat Rai as the founding President in which 101 delegates from 64 unions with a membership of 1,40,854 from all over India participated with presence of political leaders of various shades of opinions such as Motilal Nehru, M.A. Jinnah, Annie Besant, V.J. Patel, B.P. Wadia, Joseph Baptista, Lalubhai Samaldas, Jamnadas, Dwarka Das, B W Wadia, R R Karandikar, Col. J.C. Wedgwood.

British Trade Union Congress attended as fraternal delegate. 43 other unions which could not join the conference expressed sympathy and full support. A few unions of government servants kept themselves aloof. The Ahmedabad Labour Association with six unions and 16,450 members right from the start functioned as separate organization under the patronage of employers.

Lala Lajpat Rai led a procession of 10,000 workers in the city of Bombay. Lala Lajpat Rai had declared "for the present, our greatest need is to organise, agitate and educate. We must organise our workers, make them class conscious and educate them in the ways and interest of the commonwealth". He also observed that labour "today had become an international factor and everyone's life all over the world had become interlinked. There would be no salvation until and unless the workers of Asia were organised and internationally affiliated".

In this first conference with Lala Lajpat Rai as president, Deewan Chaman Lal was the general secretary. Later on Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, V. V. Giri, Sarojini Naidu, C.R. Das and several of other political leaders of the freedom struggle were associated with subsequent conferences and work of AITUC giving impetus to the work.

AITUC in its second session in 1921 in Jharia had adopted a resolution of Swaraj (Complete independence from British rule), almost eight years before the Congress adopted such resolution in 1929.

In the aftermath of second World War the AITUC played significant role in the foundation of World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU), in the conference held in London with 204 delegates and observers representing 670 million workers from all parts of the world. AITUC was represented by S.A. Dange, R.A. Khedgikar and Sudhindra Pramanik. This conference adopted workers charter.[8]

National Conferences

[edit]
[9][10]
No. Dates Venue General Secretary President
1st 31 Oct, 1920 Bombay V.M. Pawar Lala Lajpat Rai
2nd 30 Nov - 2 Dec 1921 Jharia Diwan Chaman Lall Joseph Baptista
3rd 24-26 March 1923 Lahore Chittaranjan Das
4th 30-31 March 1924 Calcutta F.J. Ginwala D.R.Thengdi
E.N.C. Sen
5th 14-15 Feb, 1925 Bombay Narayan Malhar Joshi Charles Freer Andrews
F.J. Ginwala
6th 9-10 Jan, 1926 Madras Narayan Malhar Joshi Rai Sahib
C. Prasad
7th 12-13 March 1927 Delhi Diwan Chaman Lall
8th 26-28 Nov, 1927 Kanpur Charles Freer Andrews
9th 18-20 Dec, 1928 Jharia Jawaharlal Nehru
10th 28 Nov-1 Dec, 1929 Nagpur S.V. Deshpande Subhas Chandra Bose
11th 4-7 July 1931 Calcutta মুকুন্দলাল সরকার [bn] Ramchandra Sakharam Ruikar
12th 10-12 Sept, 1932 Madras G.L. Khandelkar
13th 23-24 Dec, 1933 Kanpur Sibnath Banerjee Hariharnath Shastri
14th 19-21 Apr, 1935 Calcutta R.A. Khedgikar Ramchandra Sakharam Ruikar
15th 17-18 May 1936 Bombay Maniben Kara Sibnath Banerjee
16th 1-7 Jan, 1938 Delhi Bankim Kr. Mukherjee Suresh Chandra Banerjee
17th 17 Apr, 1938 Nagpur B.R. Bakhale
18th 28-30 Sept 1940 Bombay Narayan Malhar Joshi V.R. Kalappa
19th 8-9 Feb, 1942 Kanpur V. V. Giri
20th 1-4 May 1943 Nagpur Shripad Amrit Dange
21st 18-23 Jan, 1945 Madras Mrinal Kanti Bose
22nd 13-19 Feb, 1947 Calcutta Shripad Amrit Dange
23rd 27-30 May 1949 Bombay
24th 27-30 May 1954 Calcutta Shripad Amrit Dange Vengal Chakkarai Chettiar
25th 25-29 Dec, 1957 Ernakulam Santaram Savlaram Mirajkar
26th 6-12 Jan, 1961 Coimbatore
27th 16-22 May 1966 Bombay
28th 28 Jan-1 Feb, 1970 Guntur
29th 30 Jan-4 Feb, 1973 Calcutta Ranen Sen
30th 13-17 Oct, 1976 Jamshedpur K.G. Srivastava Shripad Amrit Dange
31st 26-31 Oct, 1980 Visakhapatnam Indrajit Gupta
32nd 15-20 Dec, 1983 Bangalore Chaturanan Mishra
33rd 15-20 Dec, 1986 Vadodara
34th 7-12 Aug, 1990 Madras Homi Framroze Daji M. S. Krishnan
35th 11-15 March 1994 Patna Ardhendu Bhusan Bardhan
36th 16-20 Oct, 1997 Amritsar K. L. Mahendra J. Chitharanjan
37th 19-23 Dec, 2001 Hyderabad Gurudas Dasgupta
38th 26-30 Nov, 2005 Delhi Promode Gogoi
39th 29 Nov-5 Dec, 2008 Thiruvananthapuram
40th 27-30 Nov, 2012 Mumbai Ramendra Kumar
41st 25-28 Feb, 2016 Coimbatore
mid 11 Dec, 2017 Ranchi Amarjeet Kaur
42nd 16-20 Dec, 2022 Alappuzha

Affiliates

[edit]

partial list:

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Hundreds of thousands of Indian coal miners launch three-day strike against privatisation". wsws.org.
  2. ^ Menon, Sreelatha (6 April 2013). "Indian trade unions are getting bigger, coinciding with slowdown". Business Standard India.
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "All India Trade Union Congress |". Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  5. ^ N. Jayapalan (2001). History Of India (from National Movement To Present Day), Volume 4. Atlantic Publishers. p. 139. ISBN 9788171569175.
  6. ^ "India: Why General Strike on the 28th of February?". wftucentral.org.
  7. ^ "Archives". Nehru Memorial Museum & Library. Archived from the original on 3 May 2011. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  8. ^ "On celebrating hundred years of AITUC; Continuing struggles of working class in India". nationalheraldindia.com. 27 October 2019.
  9. ^ "AITUC booklet on the occasion of completing its hundred years on 31st October 2020". wftucentral.org.
  10. ^ AITUC national conference to be held in Alappuzha from Dec. 16 to 20 The Hindu
  • ICTUR; et al., eds. (2005). Trade Unions of the World (6th ed.). London, UK: John Harper Publishing. ISBN 0-9543811-5-7.
[edit]