Sharan Burrow, ITUC General Secretary, said “the international trade union movement stands in full solidarity with our Indian colleagues, who are calling for employment policies and laws which support India’s working people instead of simply enriching the elite in India and foreign companies. The ITUC calls on the Indian government to commit to genuine dialogue, and to adopt policies which support working people and would lift millions out of poverty.”
Government attempts to exclude the INTUC from talks were seen by the other trade union federations as a sign of bad faith, and they refused to participate in talks where the government determined who would speak for workers instead of accepting that workers themselves should decide who speaks on their behalf. Discussions which had taken place showed that the Modi government was not prepared to listen to the trade union movement’s real concerns, leaving them no option but to launch a massive national mobilisation.
Incomes for ordinary Indians are stagnating, and the government is failing to meet job creation pledges