Treating a postcard sent by R Mayandi Servai as a public interest litigation, a bench comprising Justices M V Muralidaran and N.Seshasayee sought the state government's reply and posted the matter to May 30.
Incidentally, it was the same bench which had asked the government to invoke ESMA against transport corporation employees who went on an indefinite strike earlier this month on this and other issues.
He also expressed anguish over the court's May 16 directive asking the government to invoke ESMA against the striking employees to ensure regular services of public transport if they did not call off the agitation. The court gave the direction on a PIL against the strike by 10 trade unions representing the employees.
How can acts like (ESMA) Essential Services Maintenance Act be used when the retired people and their families were starving and struggling hard due to non-payment of their retirement benefits, Mayandi Servai said.
More From This Section
Mayandi Servai said: "The government has not settled even 50 per cent of what is due to us.... Retirement benefits to the tune of Rs.1,700 crore had not been settled. Besides the money deducted from our salary for LIC pension scheme had not been settled. That will come to Rs.4,346 crore," he claimed.
He urged the court to take "effective and emergent steps to settle the dues of the struggling employees".
When the plight of the serving and retired workers was so bad how can the court have the heart to warn them of action under ESMA? he asked.