 Hello and welcome to News Clicks Daily Roundup, I am Prashant and here are the major stories for the day. Ambulance workers continue fight for pay, day to day trial ordered in Una atrocity case. Government says 88 manual scavengers have died in the past three years. Striking teachers face violent action in Chile. US activists who provided aid to migrants will face trial again. Ileague football teams meet Praful Patel. We begin with a strike by employees with the centralized accidents and trauma services commonly known as CATS, which runs free ambulance services across the capital. Nearly 1,650 contractual and privately outsourced workers of CATS have gone on strike after the Delhi government awarded a tender to GVK Amri to run the ambulance service. The service was previously run by BVG India Limited and the company had not paid the workers for the past three months. The delay has taken a severe toll on the lives of striking workers. Watch News Clicks Roundup. The government says there is nothing in our hands. It is the government's policy. The government is not going to listen. Look, my three big daughters have gone to work. The government has immediately said, you go. We have been in CATS for eight years. CATS has kept us in contact with them. We have cleared all the tests on our own. Why do we have to do everything? I remember today that you can't work. If you want to do it, then do it in your own home. This is not fair. Look at this. How will the children do it? This is all happening because of Nehji Karan. First, CATS used to run vehicles under CATS. They used to work in a workshop on time. They had made a private workshop where temporary items were given and they were left for temporary time. They were put on the road. The patient's life is very dangerous. A special court in Varawal on July 1st ordered day-to-day hearings in the Una Dalit atrocity case. This case involves the flogging of seven Dalit men of one family by uppercast men in June 2016. Wasram Sarvaya, one of the seven victims had filed a plea through Advocate Govind Parmar on June 21th, seeking day-to-day hearings in the case. The special court of fifth additional district judge, B.L. Chwetani, which handles the case pertaining to the class and schedule tribes' prevention of atrocities acts in its order, asked the prosecution to submit the list of witnesses by July 12th. 88 people have died in the last three years while cleaning sewers and septic tanks across the country. Ramdas Athavle, minister of state for social justice and empowerment, said in the Rajasabha on Wednesday, July 3rd. According to the data presented by him, Delhi, with 18 victims, registered a maximum number of deaths. However, this data does not as that calculated by the National Commission for Safai Karmacharis NCSK, the statutory body that is set up by an act of parliament for the welfare of sanitation workers. According to the numbers released by NCSK in September 2018, 123 people employed in hazardous forms of manual scavenging had lost their lives while it worked since January 2017. And one Safai Karmachari had died every five days between January 2017 and September 2018. In Chile, striking teachers faced violent police repression in the latest round of demonstrations on July 3rd. The demonstration took place in Chile's capital Santiago. Security forces responded to the protests with water, cannon and tear gas. Since June 3rd, over 90,000 Chilean primary and secondary education teachers have been on an indefinite strike in defensive public education. The teachers are rallying behind the banner of Chile's largest teachers union, Collegio de Profesores de Chile. They are demanding that the government take steps to stop the deterioration of the quality of public education, look into infrastructural problems and clear payments over to retired teachers. The teachers are also opposing the curricular modifications recently announced by the Education Ministry which would make subjects like history, physical education and arts optional instead of compulsory for 3rd and 4th grade students from next year onwards. The union presented these demands to the Education Ministry in a 12-point charter. However, even after a month of organizing and demonstration, the ministry has agreed to negotiate on only 6 of these demands. The union has declared its intent to continue the strike after no agreements were reached yesterday. US activist Scott Warren, against whom legal proceedings were dropped recently on charges of aiding migrants, will be tried again. The case against Warren, who was an activist with the organization No More Deaths was declared a mistrial on June 11th after the jury could not arrive at a unanimous verdict. However, on Tuesday, it was announced that he would be tried once again on the charge of aiding migrants. Warren was arrested in January 2018 along with two migrants from a structure known as the barn in Tuxan, Arizona. The barn is the staging point from where No More Deaths operates by providing water and other aid supplies for migrants who cross the hostile desert at the Mexican border. Warren and No More Deaths have maintained throughout that they just provided facilities to the migrants to rest after they had suffered severe dehydration and heat stroke in the desert. But the prosecution has been maintaining that he was part of a conspiracy to bring refugees to the United States. This case is important as it may set a precedent on what constitutes humanitarianism in the case of migrants. In the new case, the charge of conspiracy has been dropped but Warren will be tried on two charges of harboring undocumented migrants. Now for sports news. After months of struggle, including a boycott of the Super Cup 2019, six clubs of India's top tier football league finally managed to get a meeting with the president of the Football Federation, Trafal Patel. The clubs have been struggling against a move by the Federation to replace the I-League as the highest tier of men's club football in India. Some of these teams, including the likes of East Bengal and Mohan Bagan, have millions of club members and fans and have existed for over a century. The new top-flight league will be the Indian Super League, a private, closed league owned and operated by a private entity. Newsclick Sports Desk has more on this issue. Trafal Patel apparently had a conference call with IAM Jirilal's guys earlier in the morning and then he met the clubs. So what they have proposed right now to the I-League clubs is that the current arrangement stays for another two or three years. They get time to play around, negotiate with the AFC and also the clubs right now. That's what Trafal Patel is expecting, hoping that it will happen. We asked him if what will change in the next three years that he has been able to do right now already so far and his explanation was pretty logical. He said that the five-year second period that F-League still had with the I-League clubs that would end and that would give them a little more leverage. Whether it will happen or not is a big issue but what struck me the most is the change in line of their approach till how we were talking about I-League's recognition and I-League being relevant. Now suddenly from there we have moved to I-League AFC recognition. So when did this change? How did that change? Whether AFC will so agree, whatever AFF has to propose that Trafal Patel said isn't sure and he ended by saying that if AFC doesn't agree to the approach then they will interrupt. You can watch a video of this entire conversation on newsclick.in. That's all we have time for today. To read more about these stories visit our website newsclick.in and follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Thanks for watching.