Kashmir Nurtures Jobless Brigade
By
Daanish Bin Nabi
Shayan Nabi, who describes
himself as a “freelance digital marketer” in Srinagar, announced on Twitter on
the night of October 10, that he is shutting down his company because of the
internet shutdown in Kashmir since August 5. “It’s been more than two months
now and I can’t bear any more losses. Thank you, dear India,” he wrote. His
tweet got hundreds of responses, most of them sympathetic to the plight of
ordinary Kashmiri people and those being run out of business by the clampdown
on communications in the Valley.
The Central government has
made tall claims of creating more jobs in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) after
unilaterally revoking the state’s special status and abrogating Article 35A of
the Constitution, which protected resident’s rights to buy and sell land. Yet,
the outcome of the revocation has only been a social, political and economic
crisis.
Employees of all sectors
from tourism to the much-vaunted Information Technology (IT) sector are on the
brink of losing their jobs. Private firms engaged in various trades are
especially in the doldrums as they face the worst of the forced state-backed
lockdown.
NOT ALLOWED TO MARK ATTENDANCE
Employees of Kashmir
Valley’s biggest Maruti car showroom, Jamkash Vehicaleads Kashmir, are on the
brink of losing work. Around 1,450 people work at Jamkash’s six units across
Valley. After the lockdown they have done no business. “The company has not
allowed us to mark ourselves as present at work ever since the lockdown. They
are afraid that if we show attendance then they will have to provide us
salaries as well. We have not been paid since August,” says a team manager at
Jamkash who seeks anonymity.
There are chances that
everybody will be laid off at Jamkash unless the situation improves quickly.
“We fear layoffs, but how can we survive without selling cars. But there are no
buyers. The government has promised citizens in India the moon but in all
truth, we are unable to even feed our children properly,” he says.
IT SECTOR
Scores of employees of the
budding information technology (IT) sector in Kashmir are being axed. They have
suddenly run out of money to run home and hearth. “We were paid for August but
not September and we have been told that there may be layoffs if the situation
does not improve,” says Amir Shafi Sheikh, who works as a software developer at
an IT firm located in the STPI or Software Technology Parks of India, at
Rangreth, an industrial hub in Budgam, Srinagar.
STPIs were started by the
Indian government in 1991 to promote software and services exports. The present
government has made STPI the nodal body to oversee the establishment of BPOs
(business process outsourcing) under the Digital India scheme. Tech and
software units located in STPIs get tax breaks and other benefits if they are
completely export oriented.
“But we have been doing
nothing for the past two months because of the communication blockade. We will
lose our jobs if the internet is not restored immediately,” says Sheikh. None
of the firms are able to contact customers, thus their sources of revenue have
dried up. “Over 100 employees are on the brink of unemployment,” Amir says.
The IT firm, AEGIS, was in
the news in August when the Srinagar authorities promised to come to its
rescue. AEGIS had lost its Vodafone business and the government promised to get
it work from government enterprises and other private firms. Employees who were
told they would be laid off were also promised three month’s pay.
Today, these 150-odd
employees are still unsure if they will have jobs, even two months later, in
November. “The Deputy Commissioner of Srinagar, [Iqbal Choudhary] has assured
us salaries for at least three months and business to AEGIS. We hope it keeps
its promise but as of now we became jobless due to the abrogation of our
homeland’s special status,” Sheikh says.
AEGIS customer care
executive, Younis Tariq, who has been associated with the company for five
years, says, “The 150 employees who have been thrown out were mostly women. We
were all simply told not to return to the office after Vodafone suspended its
operations in Kashmir.” According to Tariq, Vodafone said they can relocate to
Bhopal, but their “tiny salary of Rs 13,000” each did not permit moving house.
“How would we survive on such low pay in another state?” Younis says.
TOURISM
There are around 1,200
houseboats on the Dal and Nigeen lakes and each has two employees. “All of us
were thrown out by the houseboat owners following the evictions of tourists by
the [Prime Minister Narendra] Modi government,” says Aijaz Ahmed Bhat, who
works at Fairy Land houseboat. His salary was a meager Rs 5,000. “Where in the
world have you seen a government that deliberately takes tourists out? This is
no less than hooliganism,” Aijaz says. Over 2,400 houseboat workers are jobless
now.
THE MEDIA
Journalism jobs are also in
peril in J&K. Local media organisations have either not cleared salaries
for August or paid 20-30% less. Some have asked staff to not come to work until
“further orders”. This is despite local newspapers receiving huge government
and private advertisements. “I was told not to attend the office due to the
ongoing crisis. They said I can return once the situation is normal again, but
I doubt it. In the garb of the crisis, they have shut us out of the office,”
says Rabiya, who covers environment and culture for Rising Kashmir.
Online news outfits face
dire constraints due to the communication clampdown. Some have not published
since August 5, and they have lost advertisers. “Advertisers have told us that
they cannot help us this time,” says the managing editor of a leading portal,
who sought anonymity. His organisation cleared salaries for August but has now
told staffers that there will be no payment in October. “If the situation
remains the same, we may have to lay off staff,” he says.
Published
by Newsclick on 12 October 2019