Tagged: TWTUC
Sylhet (Bangladesh): Tea workers rally for 105th anniversary of “Mulluk Chalo” movement
The Tea Workers’ Trade Union Center (TWTUC) shares this report:
Today is May 20th. On this very day in 1921, one of the most barbaric and brutal massacres in the history of the subcontinent took place at the Meghna Ghat in Chandpur. Falling victim to the cruelty of the British colonial rulers, thousands of innocent tea plantation workers lost their lives on that day.
Around the 19th century, the British rulers cleared the hilly terrains of Assam and Sylhet to establish the tea industry. To meet the labor shortage in these plantations, poor and indigenous people from regions like Bihar, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, and Madras in India were lured with the fictional promise of “Gaach hilayega, paisa milega” (shake the tree and money will fall). In reality, however, their lives became confined within the four walls of the tea gardens. They were given ‘tea tokens’ as nominal wages, which were entirely useless outside the plantations. Consequently, these workers were forced into a life of virtual slavery.
In 1921, after 70 long years of exploitation and torture, the daily wages of the workers were slashed to a mere 3 paisa under the pretext of a global recession. Faced with this ultimate humiliation and inspired by the passionate call of the ongoing Non-Cooperation Movement, around 30,000 tea workers simultaneously declared a rebellion. Their slogan was “Mulluk Chalo” (Let’s return to our homeland). Even though the British administration and plantation owners conspired to halt all train and steamer services, the workers set off on foot. Over the course of a long week, thousands of starving workersโincluding women, children, and the elderlyโcrossed hundreds of miles to reach the Meghna Ghat in Chandpur.
On May 19th, as the workers were boarding a ship, a sudden armed assault was launched upon them, and the ship’s gangplank was removed, causing many to drown in the river. Later, during the deep state of night on May 20th, while the exhausted workers lay asleep on the platforms of the Chandpur railway station, Gurkha soldiersโacting on the orders of the British administrationโcharged at them with unsheathed bayonets and firearms. In this indiscriminately executed genocide, the bodies of thousands of slain workers were dumped and floated away into the Meghna River. The rest were forcibly driven back into the slavery of the tea plantations.
Although there had been an indirect call from the major political parties of the time behind this movement, the only fierce protest against this atrocity was forged by the workers’ union of the ‘Assam Bengal Railway’. For the offense of staging a continuous two-and-a-half-month strike under the leadership of Deshapriya Jatindra Mohan Sengupta, nearly 5,000 railway employees were terminated from their jobs. Today, more than a century has passed. The history of the Meghna’s waters being stained with the blood of tea workers remains unwritten in our textbooks. We bear the legacy of the sacrifices made by these heroic workers who have been ignored by the pages of history. We shall fight the battle for our rights forever.
Program organized by the
Tea Workers Trade Union Centre (เฆเฆพ-เฆถเงเฆฐเฆฎเฆฟเฆ เฆเงเฆฐเงเฆก เฆเฆเฆจเฆฟเงเฆจ เฆเงเฆจเงเฆฆเงเฆฐ):
1. List of Tea Gardens (by District)
The poster lists various tea gardens across three major districts in the Sylhet division:
Moulvibazar District (เฆฎเงเฆฒเฆญเงเฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆฐ)
- Hamidia Tea Garden (เฆนเฆพเฆฎเฆฟเฆฆเฆฟเฆฏเฆผเฆพ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Moulvi Tea Garden (เฆฎเงเฆฒเฆญเง เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Padmajhiri Tea Garden (เฆชเฆฆเงเฆฎเฆเฆกเฆผเฆพ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Alinagar Tea Garden (เฆเฆฒเงเฆจเฆเฆฐ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Kaliti Tea Garden (เฆเฆพเฆฒเฆฟเฆเฆฟ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Karimpur Tea Garden (เฆเฆฐเฆฟเฆฎเฆชเงเฆฐ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Bijoya Tea Garden (เฆฌเฆฟเฆเฆฏเฆผเฆพ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Muraichhara Tea Garden (เฆฎเงเฆฐเฆเฆเฆกเฆผเฆพ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
Habiganj District (เฆนเฆฌเฆฟเฆเฆเงเฆ)
- Lalchand Tea Garden (เฆฒเฆพเฆฒเฆเฆพเฆจเงเฆฆ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Chandi Tea Garden (เฆเฆจเงเฆกเฆฟ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Ramganga Tea Garden (เฆฐเฆพเฆฎเฆเฆเงเฆเฆพ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Deundi Tea Garden (เฆฆเงเฆเฆจเงเฆฆเฆฟ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
Sylhet District (เฆธเฆฟเฆฒเงเฆ)
- Khadim Tea Garden (เฆเฆพเฆฆเฆฟเฆฎ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Kalagul Tea Garden (เฆเฆพเฆฒเฆพเฆเงเฆฒ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Alibahar Tea Garden (เฆเฆฒเงเฆฌเฆพเฆนเฆพเฆฐ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Daluchhara Tea Garden (เฆกเฆพเฆฒเงเฆเฆกเฆผเฆพ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
- Lalakhal Tea Garden (เฆฒเฆพเฆฒเฆพเฆเฆพเฆฒ เฆเฆพ-เฆฌเฆพเฆเฆพเฆจ)
2. Declared Programme Details
The Tea Workers Trade Union Centre has announced a multi-day event observing a major historic milestone:
- Occasion: The 105th Anniversary Programme of the historic “Mulluk Chalo” (Return to Homeland) Movement of May 20th.
- Event Type: Discussion Meeting (เฆเฆฒเงเฆเฆจเฆพ เฆธเฆญเฆพ) and Cultural Programme (เฆธเฆพเฆเฆธเงเฆเงเฆคเฆฟเฆ เฆ เฆจเงเฆทเงเฆ เฆพเฆจ).
- Dates: May 20 โ May 22, 2026.
- Slogan / Header: “Workers of the world, unite” (เฆฆเงเฆจเฆฟเฆฏเฆผเฆพเฆฐ เฆฎเฆเฆฆเงเฆฐ เฆเฆ เฆนเฆ)
Key demands declared on the poster:
- The historic May 20th must be officially declared as ‘Tea Workers Day’ (เฆเฆพ-เฆถเงเฆฐเฆฎเฆฟเฆ เฆฆเฆฟเฆฌเฆธ) along with a paid public holiday.
- The history of the “Mulluk Chalo” Movement must be included in institutional textbooks.
Global May Day 2026: Message from Tea Workers in Bangladesh
A focal point of Global May Day 2026 is the struggle of tea plantation workers in Bangladesh and their ten point charter. The Tea Workers’ Trade Union Center (TWTUC) supports the call to action and Monisha of TWTUC prepared this message, which can be used to inform about the struggle at May Day rallies worldwide.
You can listen to the audio below and also check out the transcription. A version with a German translation is currently in the making and will be published here by Tuesday (April 28th).
A version with a translation in German was produced by Toni Spark (FAU Hamburg):
DOWNLOAD: English | Deutsch
(download mp3 with “right click” and “save as”)
Transcript:
Revolutionary greetings from the tea gardens of Bangladesh to our comrades around the world. We stand with you this May Day.
The pattern of exploitation is the same everywhere in the world. But so is our spirit of resistance.
The Tea Workers’ Trade Union Center is currently mobilizing for a ten point charter of rights.
We are demanding a minimum daily wage of 600 Taka and an end to the manipulation of weight measurements. We demand the legal ownership of the land our ancestors cultivated for generations and the official recognition of our divers ethnic identities and languages. Our struggle is for basic humanity. We are fighting for functional health care in every garden, for clean drinking water and for the rights of our women workers; including paid maternity leave and an end to violence. We refuse to be treated as relics of the colonial past. We are the backbone of this industry and we demand our share. As you march throughout the world today, remember the tea workers in Bangladesh.
Our revolution is bound together. Together let us build a world, free of exploitation.
Workers of the world unite. Solidarity forever!

Tea workers in Bangladesh rally and get organized!
The Tea Workers’ Trade Union Center (TWTUC) commemorated its 1st National Conference at the Moulvibazar District Council Auditorium in Sreemangal on June 29th, 2025 with hundreds of workers coming together.
The conference was announced by comrades of TWTUC with the following words:
Revolutionary greetings from the tea workers of Bangladesh. For generations, tea workers have endured systemic discrimination and exploitation. In response, we have been organizing sustained movements and struggles to secure our fundamental rights and dignity. Today, we express our heartfelt solidarity with tea workers across the world. From continent to continent, working people face similar patterns of exploitation, marginalization, and repression. Our struggle, therefore, is not confined within national bordersโit is part of the broader fight for international working-class unity and justice.
We believe that the liberation of the working class cannot happen in isolation. True freedom is only possible through the unity and solidarity of all oppressed, exploited, and struggling workers across the globe. As part of our ongoing movement, we are pleased to announce the 1st National Conference and Mass Rally of the Tea Workersโ Trade Union Centre.

TWTUC released the this 10-point charter of demands:
1) Wages
a) Set the minimum daily wage at 600 BDT*, preserving all current benefits (including rations, housing, and healthcare). Overtime must be compensated at double rate. For additional leaf picking, a payment of 12 BDT per kg must be ensured. Manipulation in weight measurements must stopโreplace analog scales with digital ones visible to workers. An annual 10% wage increment must be guaranteed. The anti-worker Gazette published on 1 August 2023 must be repealed.
b) By labor law, provide all workers with Provident Fund, Gratuity, and 5% of company profits under Section 234 of the Bangladesh Labor Act, 2006. As per the 2016 agreement, retired workers must receive a pension equal to 1.5 monthsโ wages per year worked. In case of workplace death or disability, full lifetime earnings must be compensated.
c) Provide two annual festival bonuses equivalent to a full month’s wage, and one additional incentive bonusโthese must not be attendance-based.
d) Enforce casual leave (10 days/year) and earned leave (1 day for every 18 working days) as per labor law.
* 600 BDT equal approx. 4.20 EUR / 4.93 USD. The current daily wage stands at 168 BDT and a new phase of labour struggles for higher wages could be expected later this year
2) Rations
Provide full family rations weekly, including rice, flour, lentils, oil, sugar/jiggery, soap, tea leaves, and kerosene. End all unjust ration deductions for agricultural land use. Sanitation infrastructure (toilets, etc.) must be provided per Section 59 of the Labor Act.
3) Land Rights
Grant legal ownership of residential and cultivated land to tea workers. Distribute unused land among unemployed tea worker youth.
4) Education
Officially recognize tea workersโ ethnic identity, language, and culture. Establish government primary schools in every tea garden. Provide primary education in workersโ native languages. Establish specialized secondary schools, colleges, technical institutes, and cultural academies in every valley.
5) Healthcare
Ensure qualified MBBS doctors, functional community clinics, and adequate medicine supplies in every garden. Provide safety equipment against pesticide-related health hazards.
Install deep tube wells and one tube well per 20 families for safe drinking water. Each garden must have at least one ambulance.
6) Women’s Rights
Grant 6 months paid maternity leave to female tea workers. Provide 2 days of paid menstrual leave per month. Supply free sanitary pads through community clinics. Ensure safe and hygienic delivery facilities, nutrition, medicine, and vaccines. Allocate raincoats to all female workers each monsoon. Build separate toilets for women in each section. Take effective measures to eliminate child marriage and violence against women in tea gardens.
7) Job Security & Employment
Regularize the employment of all temporary workers. Provide job opportunities for unemployed tea workers. Eliminate child labor in gardens. Establish quota reservations in employment for workersโ children. Employ educated female workers in staff positions.
8) Recognition of Historical Struggles
Declare May 20โthe day of the historic โCholo Mullukeโ tea worker uprisingโas National Tea Workers Day, with paid leave. Identify and honor tea worker freedom fighters and martyrs from the Liberation War. Preserve all related memorial sites.
9) Local Governance
Form union councils (Union Parishads) based on tea gardens. Utilize all opportunities to form sub-districts (upazilas) in tea-producing regions.
10) Legal & Organizational Rights
Repeal all anti-worker laws in the tea industry. Ensure the right to free association and trade union formation. Fully implement the Labor Act in tea gardens. Establish a Minimum Wage Board specific to the tea industry. Set up a permanent Labor Court in Sreemangal, and ensure resolution of all cases within 90 days.
The Daily Star reports on the conference:
A procession followed, drawing hundreds of tea workers and students from across Sylhet, Moulvibazar, Habiganj, and Sreemangal. They carried banners, festoons, and chanted slogans, demanding recognition of their rights and fulfilment of their long-standing demands. […]
Organisers said the conference marks the beginning of a broader movement aimed at mobilising the collective strength of tea workers in their fight for dignity and justice.
Several unions and comrades in Bangladesh and internationally expressed their support and solidarity with the tea workers ahead of the TWTUC conference, such as GABRIELA, the broadest alliance of Filipino women, and the International Confederation of Labour (ICL-CIT). All greetings were published on the TWTUC facebook page.




















