Friday, 30 September 2016

TATA, Socially Responsible!?






A news article titled ‘Tata Group, Mistry’s elephant, India’s most important business group is socially responsible but financially disappointing’,[http://www.economist.com/news/business/21707595-indias-most-important-business-group-socially-responsible-financially] published in the Indian Express dated 26 September and first published in the Economist caught my attention today. What is surprising to me is that while the financial health of the Tata Sons is being questioned in the article, the Tata group continues to enjoy social credibility in spite of its grave human rights violations for nearly a century now.

That a company like the Tata continues to enjoy social impunity and respect has got to do a lot with the explicit legitimacy conferred to it by some of the most respected individuals and institutions of the country.


The article in the Economist, reminds me of a write up that I had written in the year 2006 regarding Tata’s social conduct. I had not published the write up then as I had not yet generated my own blog. I had written the piece in the wake of Ratan Tata, the then Chairman of the Tata Sons being conferred the degree of Doctor of Literature. I reproduce the short piece here:

"7th May Sunday, 2006 news coverage in The Hindu on the conferring of the degree of Literature to Ratan Tata at the 66th Annual convocation of the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) held at Mumbai has been disturbing in many ways [http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/emulate-the-tatas-manmohan/article3129691.ece]. First and foremost, that the head of Tata group should be awarded such accolades so soon after the brutal killings of the adivasis at Kalinganagar who were protesting the construction of a wall by the Tata Company for its steel plant is bad enough. However what is more disturbing is that the degree was conferred by the most prestigious institute of social work in the country!



One did not expect this from TISS- certainly not after the brutal killings of adivasis at Kalinganagar. Although TISS has the name 'Tata' attached to it, it is after all an autonomous institution 


What is ironic is the fact that TISS felicitated Baba Amte at the same time as it did Mr. Ratan Tata. Baba Amte's ideology is diagonally opposite to that of Mr Ratan Tata. Be it the case of liberalization, privatization, globalisation, nuclear power, displacement in name of development, or in short, the very world view itself.  In fact, while Baba Amte has been a staunch anti dam activist, the Tata's had successfully crushed one of the first anti dam struggles in the country popularly known as the Mulshi Satyagraha, in Maharashtra. Had the Mulshi Satyagraha succeeded against the building up of a dam at the confluence of the Nila and the Mula Rivers by the Tatas  in the 1920s, the history of dam building in the country probably would have been different today.



One wonders therefore that who does TISS want its students to emulate -Baba Amte or Ratan Tata? It surely cannot be both at the same time.”



 
Memorial of protesting Adivasis killed at Kalinganagar. Photo source:  http://www.countercurrents.org/desai160510.htm


The accolades being showered on the Tatas is not a recent phenomenon. I wish to go back in history a little and recall that even Mahatma Gandhi showered praise on the Tatas as recorded in Mahatma Gandhi's secretary Mahadevbhai’s diary volume 8, year 1925:

“…We enjoyed the hospitality of Tata’s for two days. He showed us his township with a lot of love and even now he continues to shower immense love…When I was in South Africa, Ratan Tata had sent me huge support- he was the first to send Rs 25000, and he had written that I could ask for more if required. Therefore I am under a great obligation to the Tatas…”


That Mahatma Gandhi, a strong opponent of the kind of industrialization promoted by the Tatas should say this is indeed surprising. What is disturbing is that Gandhiji said this while the Tata Steel Plant at Jamshedpur had serious labor unrest in which many workers were killed!   Gandhiji also ignored the fierce struggle by the affected people against the Mulshi dam being built by the Tatas when he spoke so.

It is also interesting to note that while some of the mainstream and popular books on Indian history detail the struggles of people in Kheda, Bardoli, Chauri Chaura, Champaran, the strike by textile mill workers in Ahmedabad, etc. rather well, one hardly finds any reference to the powerful struggles of workers and peasants against the Tatas in Mulshi near Pune or Jamshedpur. This is in spite of the struggles having been fought around the same period before India's independence However some of the less known books on Indian history have detailed these struggles rather well and I wish to share as examples the social history of the Tatas as written in some of these books as follows:

1.     In the book ‘A steel man in India’, published in the year 1943, John L Keenan writes about the striking workers at the Tata steel in the 1920s as follows:  
  
 “…of all the changes I could perceive, the deepest was … in the attitude of the workmen in general toward the management…The old friendly spirit  of affection which our laborer had felt for his foreman had been replaced by an acute distrust not far from hate…this unhappy state of things…came about as a result of a strike. When it began, the men were not truculent; they seemed to be enjoying a well earned holiday and spent the days laughing and telling stories. Then few of them conceived it to be a great joke on the company if they should tear up the rails connecting the works and the railway station…the commanding officers of the troops which the government had sent to the area to maintain order were promptly informed of the mischief afoot…Soldiers detailed to prevent the men from destroying plant equipment ordered the prankish strikers to leave. They emphatically refused. The soldiers were ordered to load and take aim. The men, like overgrown children, laughed at the soldiers and their officers. The order was then given to fire. Thirteen strikers were killed and many more were taken to the hospital…the men did not forget the death of their fellows…”


2.     In the book titled ‘Mulshi Satyagara’, Rajendra Vohra writes the following about the struggle against the Mulshi dam being built by the Tatas in the early 1920s [translated from Marathi]: 

 “…Later, the officer [of Tata] named Anderson arrived with 20-30 workers, other seventy five workers joined him, they forcefully pushed the satyagrahis aside…By then, stone throwing began; five-six workers were injured. According to Kesri [newspaper], the company workers threw stones and injured people... By then the people of Paud [village] had assembled… The company workers were to attack the satyagrahis as well as the villagers. However they were stopped by the Mamlatdar and the police from doing so. On seeing the large assembly of villagers, the workers left…on the other side preparations for the next satyagraha were on. Six hundred people had registered their names with the Satyagraha Mandal…As per the information, the Government was to declare the area around Mulshi as prohibited area and the company [Tata] was to deploy three hundred to four hundred Pathans to stop the satyagrahis outside the area. There was a possibility that the Pathans would resort to violence. This is how both the sides were preparing themselves… on 13th April, Balukaka…and Gujar Gopal were beaten up badly…on 17th April, a lady, Rakhmai Dhamale  and two others from Maval were beaten up. On 19th apart from the workers, in order to beat up people, Goondas [hooligans] were brought in…but the satyagrahis stayed true to their pledge of non violence…when the satyagrahis tried to enter [the construction site], the workers started beating them up…next day the company goondas beat up the activists severely.  The women of Maval had to face severe insults. They were pulled by their hair and sand was thrown on them…" 


3.     In the book, ‘From Plassey to Partition’, Shekhar Bandhopadyay writes the following: 

" The Bombay Textile workers struck eight times between 1919 and 1940…And not just in Bombay, such strikes took place in Ahmedabad (1918,1923,1935, 1937), in Sholapur (1920, 1922,1934,1937), in Jamshedpur (1920,1922, 1928, 1942)…The TISCO management, wherever it found an opportunity, tried to crush the Jamshedpur Labor Association…and in this the local colonial administration was always with the management.  Even the goondas or  the hooligan elements, who were as a matter of routine patronized by the employers and hired as strike breakers, were protected by the local police officials as institutionalized tools of violence…"

4.  Mahadevbhai's Diary Volume 8 [translated from Gujarati]: 

"Jamshedpur too is not free of the pollutants that accompany an industry… Some of the difficulties were almost inevitable...At the end of ten years, the most difficult tasks that require utmost caution are being done by Indians too like the Americans and the British...but those Indians who do the same type of work probably are not being paid even half of the wages paid to the whites. We saw a skilled worker of Wells in the steel factory who lifted from a hot plate with a pair of tongs a steel sheet and placed it on other machinery skillfully, like one would turn a chapatti on a hot plate.  And we saw an Indian doing the same work equally skillfully. But both do not get equal wages… The superintendents of various departments were earlier Europeans but are now Indians and they work as skillfully as the Europeans today.  But they are not paid properly...

The city has been planned by the company’s engineers themselves. Here too due to the contracts with the white officials there is a division between the whites and the blacks…Higher officials are sitting with clubs and libraries. There is no facility for lower ranked workers…

If one looks at the life here, it can be said that western evils have had bad influences here...Two shops of local and one of English liquor has been licensed by the company itself and here thousands of rupees worth of liquor is consumed every month.  And because of the alcohol, the rate of crime is very high…

Two years’ ago there was a strike and unrest lead to firing too. However that is an old history. The situation was such that the company was not willing to recognize the union and the secretary of the union Shri Shet was also dismissed. And Mr Andrews had forced Gandhi to come in order to get the union recognized... "

While the above shows some of the incidents associated with the Tata's way or working before independence, it can be said that these have continued post India's independence too. Once again I wish to highlight a few examples here:

1.     In the year 2003, some seventy odd retrenched workers of Tata Power Company were demanding compensation or permanent jobs with the company. But when their long-standing demand fell to deaf ears, out of sheer desperation, two workers immolated themselves. One of the two workers died the same day and the other, 8 days later.

2.     The fisher people of the once calm and scenic Chilika Lake in Orissa too had to wage a tough struggle against the Tatas to be able to protect their traditional livelihood. While the Tatas ultimately withdrew from executing their plans in the lake, it left behind a troubled social-economic community. 

3.     In Orissa, at Gopalpur, two people died in police firing in the 1990s while they resisted the acquisition of land for a Tata plant. While the plant remains abandoned today, large tracks of lands acquired for the project continue to remain with the Tatas. 

4.     The brutal killing of fifteen adivasis in police firing at Kalinganagar, Orissa in the year 2006 as they protested against the boundary wall being built on their lands by the Tatas can be considered to be one of the worst cases of repression in the history of people’s struggle in Independent India.

5.      People at Singur, West Bengal waged a fierce struggle which the government tried to curb with equal force so that the Tatas could build a car plant. Although the Nano car plant was built in Gujarat subsequently, the Tatas refused to return the lands to the farmers of Bengal!  [ http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article101.html ]

6.     Not all is well at Tata’s Gujarat Nano plant either as workers strike work in 2016. [ http://www.dnaindia.com/money/report-police-detains-300-tata-nano-workers-on-strike-at-gujarat-plant-2191285]

The track record of the Tatas on the environment front too has not been good. But this shall be covered in the next post.

Therefore, while the financial health of the Tata group is being questioned in the financial circuit today, it surprises me that the group’s social conduct goes unchallenged.

End.












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