Jharkhand Switch to Hindi
Jharkhand to Help Workers Stranded in Cameroon
Why in News?
After an intervention by Jharkhand Chief Minister, a group of 47 migrant workers from Jharkhand who are trapped in Cameroon have received partial payment of their wages.
Key Points
- Pending Salaries and Legal Non-compliance:
- Workers employed by M/s Transrail Lighting Limited in Cameroon alleged non-payment of salaries for three months.
- The Chief Minister of Jharkhand directed the Labour Commissioner to register an First Information Report (FIR) against the employers and middlemen.
- The FIR noted violations of the Interstate Migrant Workers Act, 1979, including sending workers abroad without registration or requisite licenses.
- FIRs were filed in the Hazaribagh, Bokaro, and Giridih districts of Jharkhand.
- Salary Payment Update:
- Transrail Lighting stated the workers were paid US Dollar 100 per month, promising to transfer the balance to their Indian accounts.
- The Labour Department has requested the company to provide contracts, salary records, and other relevant documents.
- A letter has been sent to the Protector of Emigrants (POE) and other authorities for necessary action.
- Diplomatic Efforts:
- The Indian High Commission and the Union Ministry of External Affairs are actively facilitating discussions between the company and the stranded workers.
- Control room teams are maintaining contact with workers and officials to ensure their safety.
- Officials warned that failure to pay full salaries could result in the cancellation of agreements with contractors.
- Previous Cases of Intervention:
- In July 2024, the Chief Minister intervened to bring back 27 stranded workers from Cameroon.
- Efforts are ongoing to repatriate 50 workers stranded in Malaysia, who have reached Visakhapatnam and are expected to return home soon.
Inter-State Migrant Workmen Act, 1979
- The Act seeks to regulate the employment of inter-State migrants and their conditions of service.
- It is applicable to every establishment that employs five or more migrant workmen from other States; or if it had employed five or more such workmen on any day in the preceding 12 months.
- It is also applicable to contractors who employed a similar number of inter-State workmen.
- It envisages a system of registration of such establishments. The principal employer is prohibited from employing inter-State workmen without a certificate of registration from the relevant authority.
- The law also lays down that every contractor who recruits workmen from one State for deployment in another State should obtain a licence to do so.
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