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Ceylon Mercantile Union

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The Ceylon Mercantile Union (CMU) is one of the largest trade unions in the commercial sector in Sri Lanka .

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6-578: The Ceylon Mercantile, Industrial and General Workers Union was originally built in 1928 as a white-collar union in the mercantile sector. Victor Corea and A.E. Goonesinha were respectively the inaugural President and secretary of the CMU. After Bala Tampoe became its general secretary in February 1948, it came under the influence of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party . In 1961, the CMU signed

12-687: A BSc degree from the newly established University of Ceylon in 1943 and the University of London in 1944. Later he studied law at the Colombo Law College and became an advocate , practicing criminal law. He became a lecturer in Botany and Horticulture in the Department of Agriculture. He came into the limelight after his dismissal from public service, for participating in the strike of public servants in 1947. Soon after he joined

18-517: A collective agreement with the Employers' Federation of Ceylon, which was revised in 1967. It was Ceylon's first major collective agreement and the most comprehensive at that time. The revision in 1967, which took two years of negotiations, included the first ever provisions for dues check-off in the private sector. This Sri Lanka โ€“related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to an Asian trade union

24-711: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bala Tampoe Bala Tampoe (23 May 1922 โ€“ 1 September 2014 ) was a Sri Lankan lawyer and a trade unionist. He was the General Secretary of the Ceylon Mercantile, Industrial and General Workers Union (CMU) in Sri Lanka . Born on 23 May 1922 to a prominent family in Jaffna , he was educated at the Royal College, Colombo and gained

30-481: The CMU. The CMU was originally built in 1928 as a white-collar union in the mercantile sector. After Tampoe became its general secretary in February 1948, the union came under the influence of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP), which at the time was part of the Fourth International . In the 1950s and 1960s, Tampoe was known for his militant challenges to the political decisions of the government of

36-789: The day. In 1963, he led a strike in the Colombo port that escalated into an all-island general strike and defied the government of Sirima Bandaranaike when it invoked its emergency powers. When the LSSP left the Fourth International to join the Bandaranaike government in 1964, Tampoe became a central leader of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (Revolutionary) , which the United Secretariat of the Fourth International recognised as its section. Tampoe unsuccessfully contested

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