"If salaries have been paid, they cannot hold the city to ransom," a bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Jayant Nath said and sought responses from the corporations and the unions of the sanitation workers on a PIL seeking calling off of the strike.
The bench also asked, "how do we know salaries have been paid," and directed the corporations to respond with regard to the strikes called by teachers, doctors and nurses under their control and listed the matter for hearing on February 8.
Senior standing counsel for Delhi government, Rahul Mehra, told the court that enforcement of ESMA had not been considered till now and thus, he would need to take instructions on the matter.
The bench, however, refused to pass any interim order declaring the strike as illegal, as was sought orally by the counsel for the corporations, saying that without hearing the workers' union, "how can we declare strike as illegal".
Also Read
However, the workers have now raised new demands like arrears of dearness allowance and other such perquisites, they said.
They also said that while the workers were on strike, garbage collection had been outsourced to private companies, but cleaning of streets was not being carried out.
The South Delhi Municipal Corporation claimed in the
court that 40 per cent of its workers from two zones have returned to work and those still on strike were being marked absent and action would be taken against them.
It also said that even though it had released all the money that it was expected to give to the corporations, an additional sum of Rs 550 crore was also released.
The court was hearing the plea filed by Birender Sangwan seeking directions to the sanitation workers and corporations to call off the strike and ensure cleanliness in the city.