Truckers Go On Strike Demanding Lowering Diesel Prices And Toll Fees

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New Delhi: Truck operators from across the country have gone on an indefinite strike demanding a slew of actions from government, including lowering diesel prices and toll fees. This will see millions of truckers off the road as unionised truckers claim over 9.3 million members and the strike was announced on May 17.

The government is engaged in last ditch efforts to persuade truckers in the highly road transport concentrated economy not to go ahead with their call, officials said. "We held a meeting with Union transport minister Nitin Gadkari today but that was inconclusive. We are meeting finance minister Piyush Goyal at 2130 hrs today," Bal Malkit Singh, chairman of the All-India Motor Transport Congress core committee, said.

He, however, sounded sceptical if any solution can be found during the late night meeting and added that the strike will go on as announced. Singh said truckers will stop rolling from Friday morning and pegged the likely daily loss at Rs 4,000 crore for them. Truckers' key demands include reduction in Central and state taxes by getting diesel under the GST so that price of the deregulated commodity can be reduced, he said. Singh said truckers are also against the "flawed and non-transparent" toll collection system that favours road concessioners, and alleged that the time and fuel loss goes up to Rs 1.5 trillion annually on account of it. Truckers are also miffed at high insurance premia and want a reduction in third-party premium, exemption on third- party premia from GST, he said.

 Apart from this, they are also pressing for exemptions and abolitions in direct taxes, national permits for all buses and trucks and also doing away with the direct port delivery tendering system, he said. When contacted, an official close to Gadkari's office said during the meeting, transporters were told that instant solutions cannot be found to their demands but assured them the government is looking at all the demands sensitively.