24.02.2011, 11:43 6071

Arab revolutions spread to India

Arab revolutions have spread to India. At least 100,000 trade unionists marched through New Delhi on Wednesday in a protest against high food prices and unemployment, Kazakhstan Today reports.

Almaty. February 24. Kazakhstan Today - Arab revolutions have spread to India. At least 100,000 trade unionists marched through New Delhi on Wednesday in a protest against high food prices and unemployment, Kazakhstan Today reports.

Pressure mounted on Manmohan Singh, India's prime minister, as thousands of workers marched in the capital to protest against inflation, CNN reported.

The opposition has been seeking to capitalise on the weakening position of Mr Singh, who is reeling from a spate of corruption scandals that threaten to undermine his reputation for integrity. His ability to manage the economy is also being called into question as India battles the highest inflation of any major Asian economy.

Wednesday's march of daily wage labourers, organised by the leftist Centre of Indian Trade Unions, highlighted concerns that Mr Singh had failed to control inflation and that his ruling Congress party was not delivering on its promise of "inclusive growth", but instead excluding all but a few from the benefits of fast economic growth.

The demonstration drew an estimated 40,000 people from across India. It was the biggest protest in Delhi since a march against corruption this year drew many, mostly middle class, people on to the streets.

It was also the latest in a wave of protests that have swept the world, ignited by a worldwide spike in food prices. But unlike the protests that have toppled autocratic leaders, there have been no calls to overthrow India's democratic government, Reuters informed.

India, Asia's third-largest economy and home to more than a billion people, has been grappling with double-digit food inflation for much of last year. The country's hundreds of millions of poor have been hit the hardest.

The government has looked increasingly helpless as it tries to introduce policies to rein in food prices which have risen mainly on the back of soaring global prices which the government cannot control.

"We get paid 100-125 Rupees ($2-3) a day. How are we going to survive on this if prices are so high?" said Kailash Sain, who had travelled to the capital from Jaipur in Rajasthan.

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