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Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao (NOAH SEELAM/AFP/Getty Images)
Suicide of two employees of Telangana State Road Transport Corporation (TSRTC) and attempted suicide by two others have given a serious turn to the bus strike, which entered the tenth day on Monday (!4 October).
Thousands of striking employees intensified their stir with emotions running high following suicide by a driver and a conductor on Sunday.
A shutdown was being observed on Monday in undivided Khammam district over the self-immolation by driver Srinivas Reddy.
Reddy, who set himself ablaze on Saturday in Khammam, died at a hospital in Hyderabad Sunday morning (13 October).
Hours later a conductor ended his life in Hyderabad. Surender Goud hanged himself at his house.
Shops, business establishments and educational institutions remained closed in undivided Khammam district on a shutdown call by Joint Action Committee (JAC) of employee unions.
Opposition Congress, BJP, TDP, CPI, CPI-M, TJS and other groups and student bodies have declared support to the shutdown call.
The JAC termed the suicides as murders by the government. Both the employees were depressed over losing jobs as Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao refused to take back 48,000 employees into TSRTC as they had not joined the duty before the expiry of the government deadline.
Calling the strike illegal, Rao has rejected all demands of the employees and ruled out any talks with them.
The Chief Minister had even asked TSRTC officials to recruit drivers, conductors and other employees on a temporary basis. He asked them to restore total normalcy in bus operations by 21 October.
As the JAC decided to intensify the strike by taking up series of protests this week, including a state-wide shutdown on 19 October, the government has extended Dasara holidays for schools and colleges.
The educational institutions, which were to re-open on Monday following 15-day-long holidays, will now remain closed till 19 October.
TSRTC management claims to be operating over 5,000 buses daily with the help of temporary drivers.
The state-owned utility owns 10,500 buses, which carry more than a crore people every day in Hyderabad and 32 other districts.
(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)
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