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           | Patna, Jan 13 :The indefinite strike by more than 300,000  government employees in Bihar, which entered  its seventh day Tuesday, has badly affected the functioning of government  departments across the state.Most of the  government offices, particularly the treasury and registration departments,  wore a deserted look as employees kept away.
 
 The state employees went on indefinite strike Wednesday, demanding  implementation of the recommendations of the Sixth Pay Commission in  "letter and spirit" after failure of talks with Deputy Chief Minister  Sushil Kumar Modi, who also holds the finance portfolio.
 
 Functioning of the Patna Medical College  and Hospital as well as the Nalanda   Medical College  and Hospital here was virtually paralyzed.
 
 Similarly, all the display galleries at the Patna Museum  remained closed, disappointing hundreds of visitors and resulting in a huge  loss of revenue.
 
 The striking employees have ignored the state government's "no work no  pay" warning. "We will not end our strike unless our demands are  accepted by the government," said Manjul Kumar Das, general secretary of  the Bihar State Non-Gazetted Employees Federation (BSNGEF).
 
 Das claimed that functioning of the government, from the block to the  secretariat level, had come to a standstill due to the strike. "There is  total strike. Only five percent of the pro-government employees are attending  work," he said.
 
 The employees are seeking payment of arrears according to the Sixth Pay  Commission recommendations from Jan 1, 2006, and have termed as  "unacceptable" the government's proposal to pay the arrears with  effect from April 1, 2007.
 
 However, the Bihar High School Teachers Association and Bihar Inspector  Supervisor Association are among some employees' associations that have not  joined the strike.
 (IANS)
     
      
     
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