Environment

In tatters

Textile industry woes exposed by government figures

DTE Staff
statistics
(m
t)
Jobless hands
Too many textile mills closing too fast

Name of the Number of state

Number of mills closed from July 1999 to April 2004

Number of workers rendered jobless

Tamil Nadu

120

30,202

Gujarat

59

54,997

Maharashtra

55

62,310

Uttar Pradesh

46

51,804

Andhra Pradesh

40

14,418

Source: Anon 2004, Cotton/Manmade Fibre Textile Mills Closure Report, Union Ministry of Textiles, mimeo
Maximum closures took placein Tamil Nadu, followed by Andhra Pradesh, Maharashatra, Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh (see table: Jobless hands). So says the mot document, made available to the Indian Cotton Mills Federation (icmf), New Delhi -- the national association of textile mill owners -- for preparing its annual report. The statistics would be released towards the end of September 2004. The main reason behind the closures was financial crunch: 60 per cent mills shut down due to this factor. Labour unrests and lockouts were among the other reasons. "Financial difficulties comprise the main reason as most closures have taken place in the organised sector that employs a large labour force. Because of more liabilities, this sector gets into more financial problems," explains U K Joshi, joint secretary of icmf.

Datta Iswalkar, a member of Girni Kamgar Sanghthan, an association of textile mill workers of Mumbai, points at a possible fallout. "There are nearly 70,000 jobless workers in Ahmedabad. They easily get influenced by greedy politicians. This is one of the reasons behind Ahemdabad riots and Mumbai's case is the same."