Breaking News Workers Strike AGAIN

Gur.N.cool thumbnail
20th Anniversary Thumbnail Engager Level 4 Thumbnail + 8
Posted: 17 years ago
#1
Workers wage MoU scrapped, strike continues


MUMBAI: It has been a day of yo-yoing between the various TV worker associations and the Federation of Western Indian Cine Employees Association (FWICE), which is their parent body on the wage agreement that the latter signed on their behalf with the producers bodies yesterday. All of the crafts voiced their grievances, saying they were not happy with the settlement through the day by raising a protest outside the FWICE offices.

Giving into the pressure, the FWICE said it would not honour the memorandum of understanding it signed with the producers bodies yesterday. "We are scrapping the MoU signed by us yesterday," said FWICE secretary Dinesh Chaturvedi, addressing the press a short while ago. "We are doing this seeing the reaction of the workers towards it."


Additionally, indications are that the standoff could spill over and hit the film sector too, with production executives there too asking for wage revisions.

Stay tuned for further developments


This is not a old article it's from 20 November 5:30 pm

Edited by gursharan - 17 years ago

Created

Last reply

Replies

8

Views

2.7k

Users

9

Likes

5

Frequent Posters

neela226 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Rocker Thumbnail Fascinator 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#2
oh no more repeats. when will this strike end
JasveerShastri thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#3
I found this artical which state work is resume.
Striking Indian Television Workers Resume Work
By Anjana Pasricha
New Delhi
20 November 2008

Striking workers in India's television entertainment industry have resumed work, on assurance of better wages. As Anjana Pasricha reports from New Delhi, the strike had halted the production of Hindi-language soap operas, which are viewed by tens of millions of people in South Asia and around the world.

When television workers in Mumbai returned to work Thursday, after a ten-day strike, it was not just the Hindi television industry which was back in business.

It was also good news for millions of families across India, who had missed tuning into the latest episode of their favorite Hindi-language soap opera, every evening.

Shoots for TV soaps had ground to a halt as a result of the strike, forcing most entertainment channels to rerun old episodes.

Production resumed after TV producers conceded several demands made by workers. They will replace daily wages with a contract system and give other benefits.

The head of Indian Motion Pictures Production Association, Anil Nagreth, says about 150,000 TV workers -- such as technicians and carpenters -- stand to gain.

"Things like insurance have been addressed, and increments have been granted in the payments that were earlier being made. So both sides are happy," Nagreth said.

Many others are happy. The Hindi language soaps -- mostly highly-charged, emotional family dramas -- are not just widely viewed in India. They also have a huge audience in other South Asian countries, as well as among Asian communities in Western countries.

A housewife in New Delhi, 55-year-old Shobha Dhir, is among those who regularly follows several Hindi soaps.

She says she got very bored during the strike. It was difficult to fill the evening hours and she lost connection with her favorite episodes.

The massive audience has made these soaps the most lucrative segment of the TV entertainment industry and created thousands of new jobs in Mumbai, where the Indian film and TV industry is based.

But workers complain that many producers still do not operate professionally.

TV workers are not the only ones with complaints. Last month, workers in the Bollywood film industry also went on strike, saying they had to work for long hours and that payments were made months behind schedule. The strike ended with promises of more money and limitations on filming schedules.

https://www.voanews.com/english/2008-11-20-voa17.cfm

187176 thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#4
Gosh for petes sake they should sort this out how longs this going to go on!!
chickster thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#5
They should jsut pay the workers, the same thing happened in the USA with the writers strike and they lost nearly $100,000,000. because the strike went on for so long. There is no point to this strike, they should pay the workers their rightful wage and resume work.
-Sara. thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Rocker Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#6
I agree there should really understand what the poor viewers are going through aswell 😭and stop this strike and get back to work😔 so a can watch my fav serial kasam sešŸ˜†
Henna 786 thumbnail
20th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 17 years ago
#7

Originally posted by: Ektas_Angel

Gosh for petes sake they should sort this out how longs this going to go on!!

haha.. i was gna write that.. šŸ˜†
mins97 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Navigator Thumbnail Networker 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#8

when will this strike end 😔i want to see one of my fav. serial kasam se

Shagun-Ki-Raat thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Explorer Thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#9
I hope everything gets sort out soon cause I can't stay away from watching my shows......

Tia

Related Topics

Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".