JCTSL staff continue hunger strike as promises remain unfulfilled | Jaipur News

whatsapp image 2026 04 30 at 43015 pmjpeg https://jaipur.visitinrajasthan.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-cropped-R-2.png

JCTSL staff continue hunger strike as promises remain unfulfilled
JCTSL employees’ protest continues on the seventh day

Jaipur: The indefinite hunger strike by Jaipur City Transport Services Ltd (JCTSL) employees Thursday entered its seventh day, with workers alleging that the decisions agreed upon earlier are yet to be implemented. The employees have been protesting at Shaheed Smarak for a week, saying there has been no concrete action on their 14-point demands.JCTSL Employees’ Union president Babulal said, “A meeting was held on Jan 21 under the chairmanship of JCTSL chairman Ravi Jain, where several decisions were taken. However, those decisions have not been implemented till now, which is why we have been on an indefinite hunger strike for the past seven days.”Babulal also alleged that around Rs 8 crore under NPS/GPF received a year ago has not been credited to employees’ accounts, while deductions since Oct 2025 also remain unpaid. He further said overtime is not being paid despite extended work hours, gratuity provisions are pending, and there has been no progress on releasing the seniority list promised by March 2026 in a meeting in Jan.JCTSL managing director Narayan Singh said, “The demands were already accepted in Jan; however, if employees continue to sit on protest even after that, it becomes difficult. Work takes time and moves step by step.” He added that bus services remain unaffected as drivers and conductors are taking turns to participate in the protest.Employees, however, expressed disappointment, saying, “We met the managing director today, but he ignored our concerns and gave no positive response. We are taking turns in the protest so that city transport is not disrupted. But if no one comes forward to listen to us, we will be forced to escalate the protest with a citywide blockade.”The employees’ demands include implementation of the Gratuity Act, deposit of pending NPS/GPF dues, payment of overtime, recruitment on vacant posts, purchase of new buses, release of the seniority list, and proper maintenance of buses.However, with no resolution in sight even after seven days, the protest is likely to intensify.

Source link

Rate this post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *