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Niger Workers Continue Strike Despite Gov’t Shifting Ground 

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From Dan Amasingha, Minna 

As the seven days warning strike embarked upon by Niger State civil servants and local government staffs entered the third and fourth day, with organised labour in the state insisting that the industrial action will continue despite government meeting some of the demands of the workers.

Series of meetings were held between officials of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC )and  government officials between Monday and Tuesday this week which resulted in the government shifting ground over the demand of labour.

It was learnt that government agreed to immediately commence refunding the 30 percent of salaries of workers deducted in 2020 and have in fact made the refunds with majority of those  affected by the action receiving alerts from their banks.

DAILY ASSET sources disclosed that the state government also  bowed to the demand of workers for the resumption of payment of pension and gratuities to  retirees with a pledge that effective from the end of March, N200 million will be released to the state Pension Board for the commencement of the payment of gratuities to the retirees.

However, one of the main area still unresolved is the issue of Union dues deducted from salaries of workers but not remitted to the Unions and the matter of percentage payment of salaries of local government workers are twin issues that will make the strike to continue.

According to the findings the government officials could not readily provide the quantum of money deducted from workers salaries and when the Unions will get the amount remitted to their accounts.

Also some local government officials at the meeting vehemently opposed the abrogation of the partial autonomy granted them which has made not less than 17 of the 25 LGAs unable to pay full salaries.

Labour representatives at the meeting however insisted that payment of LGA workers should be made a first line charge before any other deduction which was rejected, leaving the meeting to be deadlocked.

A well-place official of labour confided in our correspondent that calling off the strike without local government workers getting their demand will be counter-productive forcing the meeting to end abruptly.

Both parties however agreed to reconvene on Wednesday evening as the Deputy Governor, Alhaji  Muhammad Ahmed Ketso leads government negotiation team.

Aviation

Passengers Stranded as NLC Locks Down Abuja Airport

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By Idris Umar Feta Abuja

Many air travellers were left stranded following the closure of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, by officials of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Thursday.

A combined team of NLC and Trade Union Congress (TUC) blocked both the entry and exit ways of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport.

The protest was part of the series of actions that the two labour unions say they would zero in on Imo, following the attack on the NLC president, Joe Ajaero.

The NLC and TUC had on Tuesday, declared a nationwide strike, which will commence on Tuesday, November 14, due to the face-off with the Imo State Government.

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Strike: FG Okays 30 Days Implementation of MoU with Labour

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The Federal Executive Council, FEC, on Wednesday approved a 30 day implementation plan for the Memorandum of Understanding, MoU between the Federal Government and the Organized Labour.

The government also is taking a decision against any external interference in unions activities by external bodies.

This is as the Minister of Labour and Employment, Simon Lalong alongside the Minister of State, Nkeiruka Onyejeocha have met with the factional leaderships of the National Union of Road Transport Workers, NURTW.

Briefing State House correspondents at the end of the Federal Executive Council, FEC, presided over by President Bola Tinubu, at the Council Chamber, Presidential Villa, Abuja, Lalong said a Memorandum was presented to the council on the implementation of the agreement with labour.

He said, “We presented a memo from the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment and the memo was basically on the agreement between government and the labour. You are already aware that 15 items are parts of the agreement.

“But we went beyond mere agreement, we told them that something different this time is happening because one, part of the agreement is to file it in the court of law which we have set the process already.

“And the other one was the presidential approval. There cannot be any presidential approval more than the Federal Executive Council. So we presented them to the Federal Executive Council. We analyzed each and every aspect of the agreement and to show the genuineness and also provide for harmonious and good industrial relationship and that was why it was presented and it was approved for implementation.

“It was agreed that within 30 days, there must be evidence of implementation and that was the basis of presenting to the Federal Executive Council the memo and the Federal Executive Council also approved it and within this 30 days, we will go on with the implementation of the agreement between labour and government.”

Fielding on the item six of the MoU which was the government alleged interference in the activities of the democratically elected leadership of the National Union of Road Transport Workers, NURTW and the mandate to him (Lalong) to resolve the crisis in the union on or before October 13, the Minister said he had already met with the various factions

He said, “Item six in the MoU is about interference specifically with issues that were about road transport workers. Immediately the next day, we embarked on meetings between the two organisations.

“As of today, they have already reached out and have concluded that of Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria, RTEAN, today they are making a report to the ministry about their agreement because they went into agreement too and we are also going to get back to their parent association.

“The next one is the NURTW. Last week we were with them. Of course if some of you were there, you knew why we postponed it, I reminded them that we are keeping to the date of the agreement but they said they cannot strictly keep to the date because it is very important to them that we realized the aim. So we shifted the meeting till tomorrow. Today, we are going to get the report, by tomorrow we will fix a meeting.

“The reason why we presented these items to the Federal Executive Council is for them to note and approve that after these things we will not want to be tolerating interference into union activities.”But those that are pending are within the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment. Our own is to dispense with conflicts and we are going to continue to do that and these two items we have mentioned, were really the particular things they hammered on when we met. By God’s grace in the next few days, those ones are going to be sorted out.”

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Minimun Wage: NLC Demands N200,000 Monthly for Workers

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By David Torough, Abuja

For Nigerian worker to get close to near favourable living conditions, the minimum wage should be jacked up from N30,000 to N200,000, the President of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero has suggested.

Ajaero who spoke to journalists on Sunday said his projection was based on the prevailing socio-economic situation in Nigeria.

He put the dollar equipment of his suggestion to $200.

The NLC President explained, “The least paid worker in Nigeria should get a minimum of $200. It’s not even up to $10 a day.

 

“I’m not talking of $10 per hour. It’s not up to $10 a day. So, if you even put it at $7 a day, that was at the international…”

 “But even if you bring it to the cost of living index and then you decide to situate it — look at transportation, if we assume that a worker doesn’t have a car, we assume he will enter three drops to work — we assume that he will enter three drops back.

And N2,000 is settled minimum if he doesn’t enter bike to get to where he is living because none of our workers lives in the city centre.

“Now, if you look at this N2,000 for 30 days, you see almost N60,000 or even N50,000 if you want to remove the weekend. You look at his accommodation. Since he’s living on the fringes, you can give him close to N20,000 if he must live in a two-room apartments or whatever in a decent place for him and his family. Now you look at feeding.

“Even if you put him on one loaf of bread, husband and wife with four children, one loaf of bread in the morning, no tea, no sugar — situate it about N1,000. You look at their lunch, even if you give them N200 per lunch, you are going to get another N1,000. You can equally look at their dinner at N200 without meat, for 30 days, that’s almost N3,000.

“For 30 days, you have about N90,000. If you add N90,000 to almost N60,000 we already have about N150,000. 

“Now, I’m not talking about school fees. If you look at school fees for four children, even if they are in kindergarten, there is no way you will not have almost N200,000. Now, if you divide that N200,000 by three months and that makes up a term, you will be having about N65,000.

“You have already passed N200,000. You are doing all these things that the children and the wives and others are not even entering motor to anywhere. You are doing this thing because they will not be sick throughout that period. You are doing this thing that they will not even eat meat or any diet.

“You are doing all these things that they will not wear clothes whichever way. So, if you go to the cost of living index, you will discover that N200,000 cannot even sustain that family. But it will sustain them by the time you do one or two things.

“If what we are pushing, the CNG or even electric whatever, if you bring down transportation cost, if you have an effective transport system, you bring down transportation cost. If you have a school system that guarantees free education, it will bring down that cost. If you have a healthcare facility, that would have taken care of the health of such people. Then N200,000 can work.” 

According to Ajaero, “But if you don’t have any of these, even that N200,000 will be a mess. But we are equally looking at that N200,000 based on what the mysterious economists are talking about that you need to bring inflation and whatever down. So, all things being equal, that’s the only way you can do it without creating unnecessary inflation but, at least, they could be able to go to the market.

“These things I mentioned, there is no soap for them to bathe, there is no toothbrush, there are no clothes, there is nothing. 

“So, you can see that that is the actual projection, plus or minus. That’s what is going to inform our decision. 

“Whether you are going to look at it from an inflationary trend or the cost of living index, the reality cannot bring it less than N200,000.”

NLC and its counterpart, the Trade Union Congress (TUC) suspended action on the eve of their planned indefinite strike slated for October 3 after signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the federal government bordering on their demands.

Chief among the concessions that prompted the suspension of the strike was the Federal Government’s offer of N35,000 monthly to its workers for six months.

Ajaero has since described government’s deal as Promissory Note because none of the agreements that preceded the suspension of the industrial action could be fulfilled immediately. 

The strike was suspended for 30 days on many demands like adoption of CNG as an alternative to petrol, making refineries work and getting the ceiling off for the provisional wage increase to go round for all workers. 

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