Labour minister Kharge, top officials skip planters’ meet (Lead)
September 15th, 2009 - 7:47 pm ICT by IANS
By Fakir Balaji
Coonoor (Tamil Nadu), Sep 15 (IANS) The absence of chief guest, Union Labour and Employment Minister Mallikarjun Kharge, and top commerce ministry officials has dampened spirits of participants at the 116th annual conference of coffee, tea, spices and rubber planters here.
“The minister could not come as his flight from Bangalore to Coimbatore (about 75 km from here) got delayed by over two hours,” a senior official of the sector’s trade body, United Planters’ of Southern India (UPASI), told IANS here.
Though Kharge was at the Bangalore airport on time, he could not board the Coimbatore flight as the aircraft, arriving from Kochi, was two hours behind schedule.
Earlier, the unofficial reason given for Kharge’s absence was that he had gone to Mysore with Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who inaugurated the second unit of global education centre of IT bellwether Infosys Technologies Ltd at its campus outside the city.
The absence of Kharge, who hails from the coffee-growing state of Karnataka, as well as the absence of chairmen of the four plantation boards at the conference forced UPASI outgoing president D.P. Maheshwari to request Tea Board deputy chairperson Roshini Sen, who was present, to officiate for the minister at short notice.
None of the mandarins from Udyog Bhavan, the seat of the union commerce ministry in New Delhi, made it to Coonoor this time, indicating the importance given to the concerns of planters, said many at the two-day meet, which began Monday, in this small town atop the Nilgiri hills.
Conventionally, the union commerce minister or his deputy is the chief guest at the century-old UPASI annual conferences. As the present minister (Anand Sharma) is away in Geneva for the WTO negotiations on the Doha Round and his deputy Jyotiraditya Scindia is preoccupied, Kharge was invited to preside this year.
“This is not the first time when the union commerce or other central/state ministers failed to turn up for our annual meeting, which is the only important event of the year. Even chairmen of plantation boards skip the meet for some reason,” a coffee planter from Karnataka lamented.
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