Category: Labour

  • NUPENG cautions on sack in Chevron, Shell

    NUPENG cautions on sack in Chevron, Shell

    The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) is worried over the purported sack threat by Chevron and Shell that will affect about 18,500 workers globally.

    NUPENG, in a statement, signed by its National President, Comrade Igwe Achese, said it is a sack too many. He described the sack threat, adduced to dwindling oil prices, as alarming.

    He called on the Federal Government to halt the threat of loss of jobs in Nigeria by multinational companies. He wondered why Chevron and Shell should sack workers when they have fully divested from on-shore oil fields.

    The unions added that it would be morally unjustified for Chevron and Shell to retrench oil workers in Nigeria, as they are carting away profits made from deep oil shores and joint venture gas projects.

    NUPENG, therefore, condemned in its entirety the impending sack, noting that it would not work with the efforts of the Buhari administration to generate employment instead of job losses.

    NUPENG added that it would amount to derailing the efforts of the government to provide jobs for Nigerians. It stated that the oil giants should cut cost by employing Nigerians in positions where expatriates hold sway and are paid 10  times what Nigerians are paid.

    The union warned that it might be forced to embark on industrial action if the Federal Government, through the regulatory agency, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) fails to stop Chevron and Shell from sending oil workers in Nigeria to the unemployment market.

  • NECA seeks reversal of CBN’s directives on N50 stamp duty

    NECA seeks reversal of CBN’s directives on N50 stamp duty

    The Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) has expressed ‘grave concern’ over the directive of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) to charge N50 per eligible transaction in accordance with the provisions of the Stamp Duties Act and Federal Government Financial Regulations (2009).

    NECA recalled that organised businesses had opposed attempts by the Nigeria Postal Service (NIPOST) to compel companies to affix a N50 postal stamp on receipts, invoices and documents of transactions in excess of N1,000.

    The Director-General of NECA, Olusegun Oshinowo, in a press statement, said there was a pending case at the Court of Appeal on the matter between Kasmal International Services Limited and Access Bank & 23 others.

    He said: “NIPOST is aware of this development and all parties, as law abiding citizens, are expected to await the pronouncement of the court.

    “The power to administer the Stamp Duties Act is within the purview of the Commissioner for Stamps as provided for in Section six of the Act, and not NIPOST or CBN, and that the Act did not make the affixing of postage stamp mandatory, neither did it specify the value to be a N50 postage stamp”.

    The NECA chief urged the Buhari administration not to introduce policies that will increase the burden on the citizens and firms within the economy. He advised Nigeria to take a cue from other climes where, according to him, stamp duty’s applicability is limited to purchases involving large sums like a house purchase or importation of goods, as against the position of applying N50 postage stamp to “all receipts given by any bank (or financial institution) in acknowledgement of services rendered in respect of electronic transfer and teller deposits”.

    On the stand of Organised Private Sector (OPS), Oshinowo said: “President Buhari will do well by ignoring the call by the CBN to boost the revenue base of the Federal Government through this means, which will increase the burden on citizens and kill struggling businesses.”

  • PENGASSAN condemns calls to sell refineries as scrap

    PENGASSAN condemns calls to sell refineries as scrap

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, (PENGASSAN) has condemned calls by the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) to the Federal Government to sell the four refineries as scrap, describing it as sabotage.

    PENGASSAN, in a statement signed by its National Public Relations Officer, Comrade Emmanuel Ojugbana, said IPMAN’s suggestion was a fraudulent way of ripping the country off its national assets.

    The union supports the government’s efforts to ensure that the refineries are back on stream, especially with the report that the Kaduna and Port Harcourt refineries have satrted production.

    “Nigerians need to ask the IPMAN leadership why they want the refineries, which can be said to be in good form now to be sold as scrap. Even when the government has shown that the refineries can work and take care of 75 per cent of the nation’s local demand of refined products,” Ojugbana said.

    He said the proof that the refineries are still viable was exhibited by the Port Harcourt Refining Company (PHRC), which posted a net profit of N11.2 billion for December 2014, surpassing the 2013 figure of N3.2 billion.

    Ojugbana attributed this to the improved financial performance for the phased rehabilitation programme, which was done by the workers.

    “IPMAN should know that aside from the challenge of Turn-Around Maintenance of the refineries, inadequate and irregular supply of crude, which is the main feedstock, is another major impediment to the efficient and effective operation of the refineries,” he said.

    According to him, workers in the refineries are poised not only to produce refined products, but also to add the needed value to the crude oil, noting that the adverse effect of rationing or not feeding the plant with crude oil was that the plant remained idle for a long time.

    “When the plant is idle for too long, this breeds residual faults and problems whenever there is an attempt to start up, since the design of a refinery is better when it is continuously operated. We are again demanding adequate and regular supply of crude to the four refineries to alleviate the suffering of Nigerians and reduce or eliminate subsidy payment, considering the plunge in global oil prices,” Ojugbana said.

    PENGASSAN also challenged the government to grant the managements of the refineries autonomy for effective accountability while sustaining the rehabilitation process already initiated.

    “If any of the refineries fails to pay back the funding (if granted financial autonomy) and refuse to make commensurate returns to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) within one year, the government is free to apply appropriate sanctions,” he said.

    Recently, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and Group Managing Director, NNPC, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, said the refineries would not be sold; rather that they would make direct payments into the Federation Account from the year.

    Kachikwu said the NNPC was adopting a plan that would give the refineries some sort of autonomy, without privatising them.

  • Union secures one year salary for sacked workers

    The National Union of Chemical Footwear Rubber Leather and Non-Metallic Products Employees (NUCFRLANMPE) has compelled the management of Nycil Nigeria Ltd. to pay one year salary to its workers who were sacked last month.

    The company, which is based in Sango Ota in Ogun State in December, last year, laid off 17 workers, including four union executives, without following due process.

    The company, which manufactures and markets synthetic resins, emulsions and allied chemicals, was said to have paid the workers only three months, irrespective of the number of years they have served.

    President of NUCFRLANMPE, Mr. Boniface Isok, who led union members to shut Nycil over alleged indiscriminate termination of appointments, accused the firm’s management of not negotiating with the union before sacking the workers.

    He said: “When 40 workers were sacked in June 2015, the company did not consult us and we did not query them. We directed the workers to continue their work in peace. On December 31, another 17 workers, including four union officials, were sacked without negotiating with us.

    “That is why we stopped operation in the company until the management discusses with us and stops all forms of inhumane treatment meted on our members.’’

    He said with the agreement now signed, the management would ensure that gross salary was paid within weeks and further indiscriminate sack of the workers put on hold.

    Isok said the union was not against the disengagement of any employee, but that the management must provide good reasons for its action.

    Human Resources Manager of Nycil, Prince Olufemi Olugbogi, at the meeting, however, apologised to the union for the breach, noting that the action was taken to reduce costs. He explained that the company carried out the sack to reposition the company in the New Year.

    A Controller in the Ministry of Labour and Employment in Ogun State, Mr. Muyiwa Fatoki, who reconciled both parties, advised them to respect the agreements.

    He said it was not enough to pay off workers as stipulated by the law, but that the relevant union should be informed appropriately to ensure that they are carried along in the termination exercise.

    After a rigorous negotiation among the government, union and the management, it was agreed that 12 months’ gross salary should be added to the union officials.

    The parties also agreed that six months’ gross salary should be added to the other staff. They added that no worker should be victimised for their roles in resolving the conflict.

  • Pension Act: ‘26 states yet to comply 10 years after’

    Pension Act: ‘26 states yet to comply 10 years after’

    Ten years after the introduction of the Contributory Pension Scheme, only 10 states have fully implemented it, the Nigerian Lbour Congress (NLC) has said.

    Speaking with reporters in Abuja, NLC Deputy President, Comrade Peter Adeyemi, said there was an need for civil servants in the affected states to be enrolled in the scheme.

    He said: “Despite the fact that the problem of retired teachers at the state and local government levels, arguably kick-started the agitation for pension reforms in the country, after the return to civil rule, when it eventually became a reality in 2004, public servants in the states and local governments across the country were excluded from coverage.’’

    Adeyemi added: “Though the 2014 amendment to the Pension Reform Act rectified the omission in the 2004 Act, the fact that only 10 states out of 36 states have completed the process of legislation, and full contributory schemes are in place as at last quarter of 2015, shows the effect of the non-inclusion of states in the earlier reforms, evenas the Pension Act of 1990, took care to have nationwide coverage.”

  • Global unemployment projected to rise in 2016 and 2017

    Despite falling unemployment levels in some developed economies, new ILO analysis – World Employment and Social Outlook (WESO) – shows the global job crisis is not likely to end, especially in emerging economies.

    Continuing high rates of unemployment worldwide and chronic vulnerable employment in many emerging and developing economies are still deeply affecting the world of work, warns a new ILO report.

    The final figure for unemployment in 2015 is estimated to stand at 197.1 million and in 2016 is forecast to rise by about 2.3 million to reach 199.4 million. An additional 1.1 million jobless will likely be added to the global tally in 2017, according to the ILO’s World Employment and Social Outlook – Trends 2016  (WESO).

    “The significant slowdown in emerging economies coupled with a sharp decline in commodity prices is having a dramatic effect on the world of work,” says ILO Director-General Guy Ryder.

    “Many working women and men are having to accept low paid jobs, both in emerging and developing economies and also, increasingly in developed countries. And despite a drop in the number of unemployed in some EU countries and the US, too many people are still jobless. We need to take urgent action to boost the number of decent work opportunities or we risk intensified social tensions,” he adds.

    In 2015, total global unemployment stood at 197.1 million – 27 million higher than the pre-crisis level of 2007.

    The unemployment rate for developed economies decreased from 7.1 per cent in 2014 to 6.7 per cent in 2015. In most cases, however, these improvements were not sufficient to eliminate the jobs gap that emerged as a result of the global financial crisis.

    Moreover, the employment outlook has now weakened in emerging and developing economies, notably in Brazil, China and oil-producing countries.

    “The unstable economic environment associated with volatile capital flows, still dysfunctional financial markets and the shortage of global demand continue to affect enterprises and deter investment and job creation,” explains Raymond Torres, Director of the ILO Research Department.

    “In addition, policy-makers need to focus more on strengthening employment policies and tackling excessive inequalities. There is much evidence that well-designed labour market and social policies are essential for boosting economic growth and addressing the jobs crisis and almost eight years after the start of the global crisis, a strengthening of that policy approach is urgently needed,” adds Torres.

    The authors of the WESO also document the fact that job quality remains a major challenge. While there has been a decrease in poverty rates, the rate of decline in the number of working poor in developing economies has slowed and vulnerable employment still accounts for over 46 per cent of total employment globally, affecting nearly 1.5 billion people.

    Vulnerable employment is particularly high in emerging and developing economies, hitting between half and three-quarters of the employed population in those groups of countries, respectively, with peaks in Southern Asia (74 per cent) and sub-Saharan Africa (70 per cent).

    Meanwhile, the report shows that informal employment – as a percentage of non-agricultural employment – exceeds 50 per cent in half of the developing and emerging countries with comparable data. In one-third of these countries, it affects over 65 per cent of workers.

    “The lack of decent jobs leads people to turn to informal employment, which is typically characterized by low productivity, low pay and no social protection. This needs to change. Responding urgently and vigorously to the scale of the global jobs challenge is key to successful implementation of the United Nations’ newly adopted 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,” concludes Ryder.

  • Fed Govt to issue safety certificates to workplaces

    Fed Govt to issue safety certificates to workplaces

    The Federal Government will soon begin to issue certificate of safety to factories and workplaces, the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr  Chris Ngige, has said.

    The minister stated this on Monday while paying on-the-spot visit to the Inter Corp Limited gas plant owned by Chicason Group in Nnewi, Anambra State.

    The minister said petrol stations and gas plants would also require a certificate of safety from the Department of Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) of the Ministry of Labour and Employment alongside the licence by the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR).

    “The DPR issuing licences for the building of petrol stations and gas plants is not enough. The department should also be issuing a safety certificate from the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment.

    “From now on, no DPR licence will be valid unless there is a certification from the ministry’s OSH department. The ministry is also planning monthly inspection of factories to ensure compliance. We can do that because we have offices in all the 36 states of the federation including Abuja,” he said.

    The minister said the OSH department needed to be strengthened for it to ensure occupational safety in the workplace, assuring that the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) and OSH would embark on aggressive factory inspection from the second quarter of the year.

    “From the second quarter of 2016, the ministry would embark on aggressive factory regulation activities aimed at ensuring that factories are up to date on their responsibilities in terms of safety of workers. Both the NSITF and occupational safety and health department will enforce the laws guiding safety in the workplace,” he said.

    The Managing Director of NSITF, Abubakar Munir, said every company that has workers on its payroll is expected to register such workers on the ECS.

    “All firms and companies operating in Nigeria are expected to register its workers on the Employees Compensation Scheme (ECS). Those who are registering now will have to pay in arrears starting from July 2011 when the scheme started except new companies that started operation after that date,” he added.

    In a related event, the Minister of State for Labour and Employment, James Ocholi has called on Resident Doctors to support the Federal Government’s efforts at ensuring industrial peace and harmony in the health sector.

    The minister spoke when he received an award of ‘Ambassador of Conscience and Notary Personality’ from the Association of Resident Doctors, FCT chapter, in his office.

    Ocholi reiterated the commitment of the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari to the promotion of decent employment and enhancement of welfare of the Nigerian workers.

    Earlier, the President, Association of Resident Doctors of Nigeria, FCT chapter, Dr. Isaac Olubanjo Akere, urged him to use his legal background to discharge his responsibility as minister.

  • NECA praises Fed Govt on fuel price modulation

    NECA praises Fed Govt on fuel price modulation

    Employers under the aegis of Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) has praised the Federal Government for the new fuel price modulation.

    Speaking with The Nation, the Director-General of NECA, Mr Olusegun Oshinowo, said hopefully, the issue of fuel subsidy and its financing would not surface again in the government’s budget. He said it is pertinent for government to focus on the policy framework as well as incentives that will ensure that Nigeria is self-sufficient in the refining capacity to meet her energy needs.

    Oshinowo, however, noted that the organised private sector is expecting a decisive, unambiguous and explicit policy statement that fuel subsidy regime has ended. He said government should also ensure the privatisation of the four refineries and jointly agree on a timeline and modalities with investors on the utilisation of the licences already issued for the setting-up of private refineries.

    Oshinowo stated that there should be redefinition of the role of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) as an ombudsman. This, he said, would ensure compliance with products standards and fair competition that would guarantee reasonability of products pricing.

    He urged the government not to delay any in pursuing the points listed by NECA.

  • ASCSN trains 1,400, calls for creation of more jobs

    ASCSN trains 1,400, calls for creation of more jobs

    About 1,400 members of the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN) have benefited from local and international trainings on union operations and activities.

    According to ASCSN, the training was put together by the Executive of the association led by its President, Bobboi Bala Kaigama, as part measures to equip members intellectually.

    Speaking during the association’s National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Kaduna, Kaduna State, Kaigama said: “I will like to announce to you that over 1, 400 members of our union have been sponsored for local and international training since I came on board.

    “This is in fulfilment of the core mandate of the current leadership of our great union to train and retrain our members. I believe very strongly that the training programmes have had very positive impact on productivity and the way and manner beneficiaries carry out their assignments in their respective workplaces.”

    Kaigama assured that the administration is committed to further training and retraining of members to actualise their collective goals and aspirations. He said the programme has become part of ASCSN and the union will not abandon it. “With your unflinching support, we shall continue to make meaningful impact as far as the education and training of our members is concerned,” he said.

    While assuring that ASCSN leadership will continue to keep the banner of the association afloat and also do its utmost best to maximise the collective wisdom of members in moving the union to the next level, Kaigama reminded members that what the leadership need from them is absolute loyalty and support.

    This, he said, was necessary “so that together we can sustain the integrity, transparency, and progressive credentials that have made this association first among equals in the comity of trade unions in the country”.

    On other welfare issues, Kaigama urged the government to consider the upward review of salaries, saying the current economic realities are at variance with the present wages being paid workers in the country.

    According to him, there is need for government to negotiate with the various labour bodies with a view to creating a new salary regime in the country.

    This, he said, will bring about improvement in the quality of lives of workers, while bridging the salary gap between the core civil service and other sub sectors of the federal public service.

  • IDPs, others to benefit  from ITF’s programmes

    IDPs, others to benefit from ITF’s programmes

    The Industrial Training Fund (ITF) said it has concluded plans with relevant agencies to train beneficiaries of the Presidential Amnesty Programmme, and Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) around the country and sustain their reintegration into the society.

    According to the ITF, training and skills acquisition programmes for both the IDPs and beneficiaries of the Federal Government’s Amnesty Programmes will be tailored and structured to ensure that the beneficiaries speedily commence contributing towards national development.

    The Director-General/Chief Executive of the ITF, Dr. Mrs. Juliet Chukkas-Onaeko, said these when she visited the Coordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Brig-Gen Paul Boroh in Abuja, during the week.

    She said the primary function of the ITF, having keyed into the job creation of President Muhammadu Buhari, was to build on indigenous capacity and provide world class certification for youths and artisans.

    She explained that the ITF recently commissioned mobile training units/trucks will take specialised training and skills acquisition to all parts of the country, particularly the north east. The ITF DG said the programme is also aimed at ensuring sustainable reintegration of the Amnesty beneficiaries and IDPs, while ensuring that government’s vision of eliminating unemployment was achieved swiftly.

    She pointed out that over 800 training centres of the ITF would be opened to the beneficiaries and IDPs for training in areas like oil and gas, telecommunications and agriculture, solid minerals, alongside other trade and skills acquisition areas.

    She noted that ITF would also partner with and collaborate with other agencies of government to carry out skills study in the North East, the Niger Delta region and other parts of the country that would encourage employment of local, rather than foreign employees in the oil and gas, solid minerals, agriculture and other sectors of the economy.

    She added that a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that will see to the smooth execution of the training and skill acquisition programmes is already being worked out.

    On his part, Brig.-Gen. Boroh said the office sought partnership with the ITF in order to develop the skills of the amnesty beneficiaries by ensuring their sustainable reintegration. He said the focus of his office was to ensure the complete and sustainable reintegration of all beneficiaries, and ensure that they contribute towards job creation and poverty elimination.

    “The Presidential Amnesty Programme is anxious to work with organisations like the ITF and strategic partners, including international ones to achieve the objectives of the Amnesty Programme,’’ Boroh added.