Workers At State-Run Firms Oppose Privatisation Of Bharat Petroleum

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Executives at major state-run companies voiced their opposition to government plans to privatise oil refiner Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd
(BPCL) in a statement released by industry bodies on Monday.Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government last month approved the sale of BPCL
and four other state-run companies, in what is seen as the biggest privatisation push in India in decades and a way to plug a widening
fiscal gap as New Delhi looks to revive a slowing economy.Thousands of workers have already protested the privatisation of BPCL, fearing job
losses, as the government plans to invite international energy firms to participate in the privatisations."Offering (the) huge Indian
petroleum sector on a platter to a foreign company would herald another era of profiteering, exploitation, tyranny and flight of capital
from the company," the Federation of Oil PSU Officers (FOPO) and the Confederation of Maharatna Companies (COMCO) said in a joint statement
Together they represent more than 100,000 executives at state-run firms.PM Modi's government hopes to sell its 53.29 per cent stake and
management control in BPCL, the country's second largest state-run refiner in the current fiscal year to March.It aims to raise more than
Rs 1 lakh crore this fiscal year through stake sales.BPCL, which also operates fuel stations, is one of the country's most profitable oil
refiners and Mukul Kumar, a senior official at both FOPO and COMCO, said the refiner had regularly bailed out the government through higher
dividends.BPCL operates three refineries with a combined capacity of 702,000 bpd in Maharashtra, Kerala and Madhya Pradesh."Indian oil
companies are being privatised and Modi will give these companies to the select 2-3 industrialists, the same industrialists who market
Modi," the Congress party tweeted on Monday.Kerala chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan has also written to PM Modi opposing the sale of BPCL
saying it would not be in the interest of employees.PM Modi's government has said that privatising energy companies will enhance
competition and benefit consumers.The Federation's Mr Kumar, however, said that in the event of natural disasters it is only state-run oil
companies that come to the rescue of the people.Selling BPCL to a private company would lead to the discontinuation of several social
schemes such as the allotment of fuel stations and jobs to so-called lower caste people, Kumar said."After (the) 1971 war with Pakistan,
India nationalised oil companies to ensure fair and equitable distribution of petroleum products to people and secure supplies for the
Army," he said, adding BPCL has spent about Rs 8,000 crore to provide free gas connections to poor households.