A fire broke out at around 7 pm on 18 July 2012 at Maruti Suzuki India's
manufacturing plant in Manesar. It claimed the life of a manager. Within days, over
two thousand temporary workers and 546 permanent workers were dismissed
by the company, and 13 of them-including the entire leadership of the workers'
union-were later charged for murder, thus ending yet another independent body
for collective bargaining.
Unions are the last, and often only, line of defence workers have in modern
industries, especially when the management isn't averse to undermining their
rights, dignity and health in pursuit of higher profits. This was true of Maruti and
their Japanese partner, and later, owner-Suzuki. Workers would get a seven-and-ahalf-minute break from physically demanding work-precise to the hundredth of a
second-to run to the toilet half a kilometre away and force a samosa and piping hot
tea down their throat. But they were denied two minutes of silence in the memory of
a deceased colleague's mother.
The sabotage of their efforts at effective unionizing, generally in collusion with the
Haryana state government, had therefore come as no surprise to the workers. Yet
they struggled through and managed to form successive representative bodies at both
the Gurgaon plant, and the one set up in Manesar in 2007. But not only were all of
them crushed, some were never allowed to be officially registered.
The often misrepresented events of July 2012 were thus far from an isolated incident.
But few today, as then, are willing to see the matter from the workers' point of view.
Anjali Deshpande and Nandita Haksar tell the story of the biggest car manufacturer
in India through the voices of the workers, interviewed over a period of 3 years. As
they tell us of their resistance to being turned into robots by an uncompromising
management, it becomes abundantly clear that the Maruti revolution wasn't the
unmitigated success it was touted to be.