Tag: Ajaero

  • Tax Laws’ effect on workers: Oshiomhole, Ajaero differ

    Tax Laws’ effect on workers: Oshiomhole, Ajaero differ

    • Obasanjo, Kukah, others honour first NLC president Sunmonu at 85

    How does the tax reform regime affect the worker?

    Two foremost labour leaders – Adams Oshiomhole and Joe Ajaero – differed sharply on the issue yesterday.

    Ajaero, President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), said the tax laws, which took effect from January 1, propose the taxation of minimum wage earners.

    However, Senator Oshiomhole, a former NLC president, insisted that minimum wage earners are exempt from taxation.

    They spoke yesterday at the presentation of a book: “Organise, don’t agonise,” written by the first President of the NLC, Alhaji Hassan Sunmonu, to mark his 85th birthday.

    Sunmonu served as the pioneer president of the NLC between 1978 and 1984, following the consolidation of the different labour movements.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo chaired the event, while the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto, Mathew Hassan Kukah, reviewed the book.

    Ajaero accused the Federal Government of scheming labour out of the process that culminated in the passage of the tax bills.

    He said: “A tax law that imposes a heavy burden on workers and the poor is not progressive.

    “A tax policy that taxes the national minimum wage is not fair.

    “A tax that taxes the masses who are living in excruciating poverty is regressive.

    “That was why we were excluded from the committee, and that was why our warnings went unheeded.”

    The NLC president also urged the government to fully constitute the National Pension Commission (PenCom) Board and to immediately address Nigerians’ concerns over the tax laws, instead of what he described as the “present grandstanding by Mr Taiwo Oyedele of the Presidential Tax Committee and Zacch Adedeji of the Nigeria Revenue Service.”

    Both Oyedele and Adedeji have, at several fora, explained that the tax laws exempt minimum wage earners from payment.

    Echoing them, Oshiomhole, who spoke after Ajaero, chided the labour leader for making what he described as wrong claims.

    He said: “The minimum wage earner is exempted from tax.

    “So, when you (Ajaero) say minimum wage is being taxed, they will see that as a loophole.

    “The tax laws are subject to amendment in the same way you negotiated a benchmark for the minimum wage.”

    He added: “The lesson of Sunmonu is this: if it is wrong, fight it. If you know it (the tax law) is wrong, fight it. Do not lament it.

    “On the floor of the Senate, I always say I have not come to Abuja to lament imperfection.

    “What the people need is not our tears or emotional statements.

    “Those who do bad things don’t do them out of ignorance, and those who enjoy a particular order will not give it up.

    “You have to fight them to give up.”

    Ajaero also urged the government to prepare for an early review of the minimum wage, saying: “Let the government move from agonising the people to organising with them.

    “Let us build a democracy that delivers not just political freedom but economic liberation, where the wealth of the nation serves the welfare of its people.

    “On this note, we once again call on the Federal Government to urgently address the wages of Nigerian workers before next year’s statutory negotiation of the national minimum wage.”

    He also alluded to the controversy over alleged alterations in the tax laws.

    “Insisting on going ahead is akin to muddling along in confusion and darkness, since we do not know which one is truly the law.

    “Continuing with this is a dangerous pattern that seriously undermines the tax administration itself and indeed our democracy,” he said.

    Following the outcry, especially by the opposition, the National Assembly has released the Certified True Copy (CTC) of the tax bills as passed by it and forwarded for presidential assent.

    The author of the book urged trade union leaders to be upright in their dealings.

    He said: “Leaders, you are warned. You have the choice to stay clean and abide by the grace of God or join politicians to do the wrong thing, disgrace yourselves and incur the wrath of God.

    “Let us stay the course in the interest of the future of our children and grandchildren.

    Read Also: ‘New tax laws to plug revenue leakages in oil, gas sector’

    “The faith Nigerian workers have in us is a sacred trust that we should not betray.

    “If we betray it here and thereafter, the judgments are there. Let us stay the course.”

    Obasanjo recalled that he consolidated the labour movements during his tenure as military head of state between 1976 and 1979 to prevent labour unions from being sponsored by foreign agents.

    He said while one movement was sponsored by the Russian secret service (KGB), another was sponsored by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

    “I needed for Nigeria a Nigerian labour union, organised by Nigerians, controlled by Nigerians and financed by Nigerians.

    “So, I decided there was going to be a labour union reform, and I think the man I put in charge was Justice Adebiyi,” Obasanjo said.

    He explained that Justice Adebiyi was appointed to lead the reform process, which ultimately resulted in the establishment of the NLC, with Sunmonu emerging as its first elected leader.

    “I don’t know how Sunmonu felt at that time, but I felt comfortable,” he said.

    Obasanjo praised Sunmonu for strengthening labour leadership and expanding its influence across Africa and globally.

    He also revealed that he wrote the foreword to the book, highlighting Sunmonu’s contributions to national development.

    The event was attended by former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha; former Osun State Governor, Rauf Aregbesola; human rights lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN); Director-General of the Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS), Issa Aremu; President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, Chris Piwuna; former NLC President, Ayuba Wabba; ex-ECOWAS Executive Secretary, Mohamed Ibn Chambas, and other dignitaries.

  • The Ajaero strike and the masquerade’s legs

    The Ajaero strike and the masquerade’s legs

    (This article was first published in this column on 26 November, 2023, at a testy time in union-employer relations.)

    Whenever things are entangled, seeking to disentangle them is the normal course of action. This happens when the respective entangling things are easily discernible. However, sometimes, those things are so similar and yet so different that disentanglement becomes herculean. To describe such complex, ambivalent and confused situations, the idiom called to service in Yoruba is “Esè eégún ti dàpò mó t’èèyàn.” (‘The masquerade’s legs are entangled with human legs.’) The masquerade, by the way, is believed to be a sacred being from the extra-terrestrial habitation of the revered ancestors, while the human being is earthly and non-sacred. So, how do you extricate a sacred set of legs from a mundane one without offending the ancestors?

    A series of such confusing spectacles marked the last nationwide strike of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), otherwise called the Ajaero Strike, which started on Tuesday, 14 November, 2023 and was planned to be total and indefinite. Incidentally, the strike was suspended on Wednesday, 15 November, 2023, after negotiations between the NLC and the government. In spite of the suspension, questions relating to the strike remain nagging.

    First, the entanglement of the masquerade’s and human legs happened in relation to who exactly Joe Ajaero was. In his visit to Imo State, was he a citizen of the state who had visited as a chieftain of the opposition Labour Party (LP) with the aim of promoting his political party in the then-closely approaching governorship election in the state or was he the National President of the NLC who had gone there to promote the welfare of members of his trade union? This ambivalence may have caused him to be beaten up by people who were presumed to be political thugs and who probably thought they were contending with a threatening rival political party member rather than a sacred, masquerade-like labour union personage. It is in reaction to the assault on Ajaero that the NLC and its sister union – the Trade Union Congress (TUC) – declared the indefinite and total national strike.

    Second, the masquerade’s legs phenomenon was manifested in who the aggressor was. Ajaero was beaten in only one out of the thirty-six states, and revenge was being exacted from all of the thirty-six states and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. This violated the principle of justice encoded in the saying, “Ìka tó bá sè l’oba n gé.” (‘It’s the finger that errs that the king cuts.’) In prosecuting the strike, one finger erred, but thirty-seven were cut.

    Read Also: I never said Buhari was linked to Boko Haram, Jonathan clarifies

    Third, the ambivalence and confusion were related to the real motive for the strike. Was the strike declared to get restitution for the injuries of Ajaero or was it declared to wreck the economy or destabilise the All Progressives Congress (APC) national government by LP stalwarts hiding behind the unionist screen?

    Note, by the way, that while Ajaero and the NLC were vociferous in claiming that the APC-led government of Imo State had been mistreating the workers in the employment of the state, the workers themselves were adulating the governor. A situation was therefore created in which, as the saying goes, “Alára l’ára ò r’òun, o ló kú àìsùn, ó kú àìwo.” (‘A person says they’re not feeling any pain, but you’re telling them, “Sorry for the sleeplessness the pain is causing you.”’) Granted that there could even have been a few areas in which the state government was defaulting in relation to the welfare of the workers, the NLC should not have created a situation in which it would be crying more than the bereaved. In a more picturesque way, a Yoruba proverb says, “Elékún n sunkún, Láróyè n sun èjè.” (‘The person who has a problem is shedding watery tears, but bloody tears are streaming down the cheeks of Laroye the sympathiser.’) Incidentally, Laroye is another word for Èsù, which some people translate into English as “the Devil”.

    The Ajaero strike showed that the NLC has immense potentials to wreak indiscriminate havoc on the nation. Did it therefore set out of its own volition to undermine the government or was it recruited to do the hatchet job for woebegone opponents of the Tinubu government, in the light of the failure of the President’s opponents to remove him from office through the courts? This question is important, because, in public reactions after the Supreme Court judgement affirming his victory, statements had been made which suggested the willingness to use extra-judicial means to settle scores with the President.

    Fourth, the masquerade’s legs syndrome was reflected in the joining of the strike by some academic affiliates of the NLC. This seeming headfirst joining of the Ajaero strike raises a number of very critical questions. The most important ones here are: What role should academic staff unions play when they affiliate with NLC or TUC? Should they submit zombie-like to the two unions’ directives or should they provide the intellectual compass to the umbrella unions? The academic staff unions listed as joining the Ajaero strike are the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), the College of Education Academic Staff Union and the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics. The Punch, in its 15 November, 2023 edition, reported the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) as saying as follows about the strike: “It is with a heavy heart that we, as the apex student body in the country, address the irrationality, disregard for the court of law, and apparently misplaced priority demonstrated in this action.” Did this not amount to the tail wagging the dog?

    With respect to ASUU, one observer remarked that he could not remember the last time ASUU joined an NLC strike. He then wondered whether ASUU’s decision was not motivated by the fact that, since it had become impolitic for it to directly embark on a strike considering the badly-prosecuted 2022 strike, ASUU found it convenient to jump on to the bandwagon of the NLC strike. He therefore seemed to have been suggesting that ASUU’s case was like that of the monkey itching to climb a tree, and then finding a ready excuse when its in-law’s club got stuck in the branches of the tree. The monkey rushed up the tree without thinking twice, and oblivious of the fact that there could be ants with very painful bites awaiting it in the tree. In this regard, our people admonish the monkey as follows: “Ìjímèrè, só’gi gùn ko má baà gungi aládi.” (‘Monkey, beware of which trees you climb, so that you don’t climb an ant-infested one.’) Going forward, academic staff unions need to be more circumspect about which kind of strikes to join or to declare.

    Fifth, ASUU put itself in an ambivalent position by joining the strike. When the last ASUU strike was called off on 14 October, 2022 and lecturers were paid half-salary for that month, one of the complaints of ASUU was that lecturers had, by that government action, been reduced to daily paid or casual workers. Specifically, in the Daily Trust of 8 November, 2022, the President of ASUU, Professor Emmanuel Osodeke, was reported to have declared as follows about the ending of the strike: “This we believe, as a union of thinkers, intellectuals, and patriots, will not only aid the process of amicable resolution of the crisis, but will also set the tone for smooth industrial relations between Government and Nigerian workers at large. Unfortunately, the response of government towards ASUU’s demonstration of trust was the so-called ‘pro-rata’ payment for eighteen days as the October 2022 salaries of academics thereby portraying them as daily paid workers!” Now, has the manner in which the union joined the Ajaero strike been sufficiently elevating or ennobling?

    When the Ajaero kind of strike occurs, it is helpful to recall the most comparable events in other climes. After all, as our people say, “Oun tó jo’un làá fí wé’un; èpo èpà ló jo pósí èlírí.” (‘Let’s compare likes with likes; it’s the groundnut shell that resembles the midget mouse’s coffin.’) Moreover, it is necessary to appreciate the wisdom in the proverb, “Afogbón-ológbón-sogbón ni ò jé kí á pe àgbà ní wèrè.” (‘It’s learning from other people’s experience that prevents an elderly person from being called a fool.’)

    Once upon a time, there was a very powerful trade union called the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in Great Britain. It had a very charismatic, controversy-courting President called Arthur Scargill. At a point, the NUM was so powerful that it caused the fall of a government. The Secretary of Education in that fallen government was called Margaret Thatcher, and she bided her time. Then she became Prime Minister. The NUM struck again in the early years of her government. The new government buckled and yielded to the demands of the union. Encouraged by this manifestation of power, the NUM embarked on another strike a few years later. This time around, like a ram that had stepped back to re-energise, the government came back charging. It confronted the union, and though the workers remained on strike for a few days short of one whole year, they got no concession from the government. With the government firing on all cylinders and with the strike debilitating the workers and their families, a pitiable Arthur Scargill had no choice but to announce the end to the strike. 

    Does NLC look like the NUM? Does Joe Ajaero look like Arthur Scargill? Does President Bola Ahmed Tinubu look like Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher? Labour unions are immensely powerful. With that power, a properly-focussed union can earn remarkable benefits for its members. And it is when they are preoccupied with seeking such members’ welfare gains that they are on the most solid ground. In contrast, trade unions are on the most slippery ground when they venture into such adversarial environments as politics, in which all is fair as in love and war.

    It is hoped that, as the NLC and the TUC relate with the Nigerian government, push would not come to shove. True, labour unions are powerful. But it is not a zero-sum game. That labour unions have power does not stop government from being powerful or from being more powerful. As the saying goes, “Tí irin bá kan irin ìkan á tè.” (‘When a rod encounters a rod, one must bend.’) In their agitations, the status and motives of NLC and TUC must be clear at all times. It must become unnecessary, going forward, for the question to be asked, “Are the NLC and TUC workers welfare outfits or are they the labour wing of the government’s detractors?” Let the human legs be clear and let the masquerade’s legs be clear. Entangling them can only cause agony. Those who have ears, let them hear. 

    LAST LINE: Considering the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria’s feud with Dangote Petroleum, the union should be concerned about a 2 October, 2025 YouTube video by Africa Today Channel tellingly titled, “PENGASSAN: The union that broke Nigeria.”          

  • Ajaero’s political gambit risks derailing Nigeria’s Labor movement

    Ajaero’s political gambit risks derailing Nigeria’s Labor movement

    • By Chukwuma Okeke

    In a stunning display of misplaced priorities, Joe Ajaero, president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), has thrust the once venerable union into the heart of a senatorial squabble, vowing mass protests and legal battles over the prolonged suspension of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan. This ill-advised intervention not only oversteps the NLC’s mandate but flagrantly disregards the principle of sub judice a cornerstone of judicial integrity that prohibits interference in ongoing court cases to prevent prejudice.

    With multiple lawsuits pending, including those initiated by the senator herself and allegations of her non-compliance with a Federal High Court ruling, Ajaero’s grandstanding amounts to nothing less than an assault on due process.

    The Senate clerk’s decision to bar her resumption until these matters are resolved is not “legislative bad faith,” as the NLC claims, but a prudent adherence to legal norms that Ajaero seems eager to trample.What business does the NLC have with the internal politics of the National Assembly? Founded to safeguard workers’ rights fair wages, safe workplaces, and economic protections the congress has no legitimate stake in senatorial suspensions or parliamentary politics.

    Ajaero’s rhetoric, proclaiming that “an attack on one senator today is an attack on the sovereignty of every Nigerian voter tomorrow,” rings hollow when uttered by a labor leader whose real flock is supposedly the millions of Nigerian workers grappling with inflation, power outages, and exploitative policies.

    This is partisan posturing at its worst, transforming the NLC into a political pawn rather than a bulwark for the working class. Civil society organizations have rightly lambasted Ajaero for abusing his office, calling for his removal and urging him to refocus on labor issues instead of dabbling in “partisan politics.”This hypocrisy is galling: rules are ironclad when they favor our allies, but conveniently ignored when they don’t.

    Read Also: Ajaero’s planned inauguration of caretaker committee splits Edo NLC

    Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan’s saga is riddled with legal entanglementsdefamation suits, contempt findings for violating gag orders, and her own court filings against the Senate leadership. Ajaero demands her immediate reinstatement, yet preaches judicial respect in labor disputes.

    It’s a double standard that erodes trust and exposes the NLC as a selective enforcer of justice, more interested in currying favor with political clientele than upholding principles.Under Ajaero’s stewardship, the NLC has devolved from a focused advocate into a meddlesome interloper, losing sight of its core mission. Shame on Ajaero and the congress for this distraction, which has drawn widespread condemnation and calls for his ouster.

    Workers are demanding his resignation over repeated failures: eroding public trust through unfulfilled strike threats, perceived government coziness, and inaction on pressing issues like the persistent national grid collapses that plunge Nigerians into darkness. The NLC has little to show for his tenure no landmark wage victories, no sweeping reforms precisely because of this lack of focus.

    Instead of mobilizing against economic hardships, Ajaero is squandering resources on senatorial sideshows.

    History offers stark lessons for wayward leaders like Ajaero. Consider those who maintained apolitical stances and achieved enduring successes: Samuel Gompers, founder of the American Federation of Labor, eschewed partisan ties to champion “pure and simple” unionism, securing the eight-hour workday, child labor bans, and workers’ compensation laws that uplifted millions. Similarly, César Chávez, leader of the United Farm Workers, focused relentlessly on migrant laborers’ rights, boycotting exploitative farms to win better pay and conditions without entangling in electoral politics.

    A. Philip Randolph, a Black labor icon, organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and pressured for civil rights advancements through union power alone, paving the way for desegregation in employment. Contrast this with leaders who lost focus and courted calamity.

    In the U.S., Frank Keeney and Fred Mooney of the United Mine Workers were forced to resign after political overreach led to union decline and membership losses.

    Closer to home, former NLC president Adams Oshiomhole transitioned to politics as Edo State governor, but his shift diluted labor’s voice, leaving a legacy marred by controversies and accusations of abandoning workers’ causes. Globally, Lech Wałęsa of Poland’s Solidarity union became president but faced corruption scandals and political isolation, tarnishing his heroic image. These examples illustrate a sure path to irrelevance: when labor leaders poke their noses into unrelated political fray, they invite division, erode authority, and become cautionary tales.

    In the greater interest of the Nigeria Labour Congress and its teeming millions of members, a call should be made by the congress to Ajaero, to return to his mandate. He should champion workers against power failures, inflation, and unfair policies, not senators in court battles. Continued meddling will only cement his tenure and legacy as the architect of the NLC’s downfall, a calamity Nigeria’s labour movement can ill afford. The congress deserves better; it is time for the leadership to refocus or step aside.

    Chukwuma Okeke is a public affairs analysist and commentator and can be reached via winner4real75@gmail.com

  • Ajaero’s planned inauguration of caretaker committee splits Edo NLC

    Ajaero’s planned inauguration of caretaker committee splits Edo NLC

    Affiliates of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) in Edo State are divided over the planned inauguration of a caretaker committee to oversee the affairs of the union.

    There are fears that the NLC may be hit by crisis, following rejection of the committee by Edo NLC Chairman, Comrade Bernard Egwakhide.

    The committee is to be headed by the Chairman of the Benin Zone of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Prof. Monday Igbafen.

    Comrade Adams Oshiomhole Labour House in Benin City, venue of the inauguration, has been placed under lock and key.

    Edo House of Assembly at its Tuesday’s plenary said Ajaero’s imposition of a leadership on the state chapter of the NLC was capable of breaching peace.

    It asked Ajaero to work with Comrade Eguakhide, whom the Edo workers preferred.

    Read Also: ASUU rejects FG’s loan scheme for lecturers, others 

    The assembly passed a resolution calling on Comrade Ajaero to shelve the proposed leadership change of the NLC executive council (exco) in the state.

    Majority Leader Jonathan Ibhamawu, who moved the motion, said there was harmonious labour force devoid of strife under the leadership of Comrade Eguakhide.

    Acting National Secretary of the NLC, Benson Upah, in a statement, accused  Edo State Government of trying to frustrate its efforts to inaugurate the caretaker committee.

    He said keys to the NLC secretariat had not been released to its team.

    Upah said its decision was in line with labour law and global practices.

    He explained that the circumstances leading to the dissolution of the Edo State Council of Nigeria Labour Congress were open.

    “They were preceded by efforts by a joint committee comprising leading lights from the congress and the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Muhammad Dingyadi.

    “With the inauguration of the caretaker committee scheduled for today in Benin City, to which the government was invited, the key to the NLC secretariat in Benin City has not only been seized by government, threats have been issued to members of the caretaker committee and those assigned by the congress to inaugurate them.”

  • Tension as Ajaero set to inaugurate Edo NLC caretaker committee

    Tension as Ajaero set to inaugurate Edo NLC caretaker committee

    Affiliates of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) in Edo State are currently divided over the planned inauguration of a caretaker committee to oversee affairs of the union in the state.

    There are fears that the NLC might snowball into a crisis following the rejection of the Committee by the Edo NLC Chairman, Comrade Bernard Joman Egwakhide.

    The Caretaker Committee is to be headed by the Chairman of the Benin Zone of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Prof. Monday Igbafen.

    Meanwhile, the Comrade Adams Labour House in Benin City, venue of the inauguration, has been placed under lock and key.

    The Edo House of Assembly at its Tuesday plenary said Ajaero’s imposition of a leadership on the state chapter of the NLC was capable of breaching peace in the state.

    It asked Ajaero to work with Comrade Eguakhide, whom the Edo workers preferred.

    The Assembly passed a resolution calling on Comrade Ajaero to shelve the proposed leadership change of the NLC Exco in the state.

     Majority leader, Hon. Jonathan Ibhamawu, who moved the motion, said there is a harmonious labour force devoid of strife under the leadership of Comrade Eguakhide.

    Acting National Secretary of the NLC, Benson Upah, in a statement, accused the Edo State government of trying to frustrate its efforts to inaugurate the caretaker committee.

    Read Also: Labour crisis: Edo NLC rejects Ajaero’s caretaker committee

    He said the keys to the NLC secretariat have not been released to its team.

    Upah said its decision was in line with labour law and global practices.

    He explained that the circumstances leading to the dissolution of the Edo State Council of the Nigeria Labour Congress were opened.

    “They were preceded by efforts by a joint committee comprising leading lights from the Congress and the Honourable Minister of Labour and Employment; Dr. Muhammad Maigari Dingyadi.

    “With the inauguration of the caretaker committee scheduled for Thursday, August, 28, 2025 in Benin City to which the government was invited, the key to the NLC Secretariat in Benin City has not only been seized by government, threats have been issued to members of the caretaker committee and those assigned by Congress to inaugurate them.”

  • Labour crisis: Edo NLC rejects Ajaero’s caretaker committee

    Labour crisis: Edo NLC rejects Ajaero’s caretaker committee

    Edo State chapter of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has rejected the caretaker committee constituted by the body’s National President, Comrade Joe Ajaero.

    A statement signed by Edo NLC Chairman, Comrade Bernard Egwakhide and Assistant Secretary, Comrade Omole Osahon, urged the public to disregard and not give any form of legality to the five-man caretaker committee constituted by Ajaero.

    The statement urged Comrade Ajaero to focus on serious issues that concerned the welfare of workers, instead of trying to impose Odion Olaye on Edo workers through the so-called caretaker committee.

    It said Olaye had been rejected by Edo workers.

    “The so-called caretaker committee is orchestrated by Chief Odion Olaye, who once threatened that “Edo will burn” if a particular politician does not win an election in Edo State. We will not allow him continue to lead Edo NLC council by proxy.

    “We do not only reject the committee purportedly set up by Joe Ajaero and Odion Olaye, we also view the caretaker committee as an attempt to undermine the state’s stability and to carry out Olaye’s earlier threat of “burning down Edo State.

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    “Comrade Ajaero’s personal move to impose this connived contraption has further sparked controversies. We wish to on behalf of Edo workers use this medium to warn and advise him and Olaye to retrace their steps and leave Edo workers alone, as we have been enjoying a very peaceful and friendly Labour relations and working relations since Olaye was removed by majority members of the affiliate unions and replaced with Comrade Bernard Egwakhide-led executive.

    “It is on record that the “United Labour Congress” (ULC) that was used to castrate the NLC at a time, was a baby of Comrade Joe Ajaero. His action is again tending towards same in Edo State. We also call on the Federal Ministry of Labour to respect the rights of workers and labour unions in Edo State, ensuring they can operate freely without fear of intimidation or persecution by Comrade Ajaero.

    “Let Comrade Ajaero and his cohorts know that Edo workers are ready to resist any attempt or moves by him to impose Odion Olaye on Edo workers for the second time in the name of a caretaker committee. Edo workers are ready and solidly behind Comrade Egwakhide-led NLC council in Edo State,” they said.

  • Ajaero, Abure disagree on cause of LP crisis

    Ajaero, Abure disagree on cause of LP crisis

    Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President Joe Ajaero and factional Labour Party (LP) National Chairman Julius Abure yesterday disagreed over the causes of the protracted crises that have assailed the platform.

    Ajaero alleged that government agencies are actively working to destabilise the party through various means.

    But the factional chairman disagreed, saying that the umbrella workers’ union is behind the LP’s woes.

    Abure chided Ajaero for hypocrisy,  saying that he is plotting to destabilise the party.

    The LP, which came third in the 2023 presidential poll, has sunk deeper into leadership crisis as three forces – NLC, the National Working Committee (NWC), led by Abure and the National Caretaker Committee (NCC), led by Senator Esther Nenadi-Usman – are locked in supremacy battle.

    The NLC, which is the acclaimed founder of the party, through its Political Committee, has insisted that Abure’s tenure as chairman had expired.

    The labour centre is also threatening to take over the party secretariats in states.

    READ ALSO: Oloyede: Beyond the glitch

    Also, the NCC, backed by the lone LP Governor Alex Otti (Abia) and its 2023 presidential candidate,  Peter Obi, have withdrawn recognition from Abure.

    The NCC also held another stakeholders meeting yesterday.

    However, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) gave the nod to the Anambra State LP governorship candidate, George Moghalu, whose name was forwarded by the Abure faction to contest the November poll.

    When the crisis shifted to the court, the Supreme Court ruled that it should be settled by the party because it is a party affair.

    Ajaero, who reflected on the crisis during the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of the party declared that government agencies are troubling the party.

    He said the platform was open to defectors, saying equal opportunities would be given to them, irrespective of social status, religion, or ethnicity.

    Ajaero said: “All agencies of government are involved in these destabilisation plots. We must be clear about this.

    “They must be told to remove their hands from the organisation of the Workers’ Party. That is a sin. Across over 57 countries of the world, Labour Parties are functional and driven by workers’ unions.”

    Ajaero said the British Trades Union Congress (TUC) has operated the Labour Party for decades, using a union office, as an example of global practice.

    He queried: “So, why should Nigeria be different? Why would the government put eyes on the Labour Party here?”

    Ajaero said LP is not the exclusive preserve of the NLC, adding that it is a party “formed by Congress and given to Nigerians with a clear-cut ideology.”

    He emphasised the platform’s openness and commitment to inclusivity.

    Ajaero also criticised attempts to use the Supreme Court to interfere in the internal affairs of the party, pointing out that the apex court had already ruled that internal crises should be resolved through mechanisms within the party.

    He added: “When people talk about Supreme Court rulings, I wonder if the Supreme Court is now the one to run political parties. It is not the Supreme Court that constitutes the Labour Party”.

    But, in a statement, the National Publicity Secretary of the Abure faction,  Obiora Ifoh, said: “We must state clearly and categorically that if there is any person or organisation that has destabilised the Labour Party or who is working to destabilise the party, it is no other person than Joe Ajero and the NLC.”

    The statement reads: “We must also state here that after the general election in 2023, the party has no issues at all, we had no faction and we had no major disagreement in the party. It was Ajero who went ahead to illegally, unprofessionally and unconstitutionally set up a so-called Transition Committee which went all over the place making noise and debasing the image of the party.

    “It was the same Committee set up by Ajero that was going to INEC everyday, constituting nuisance, all in attempt to destabilise the party, mobilising people, including old and retired men, including Abdulawaheed Omar, Comrade Ejiofor, Lawson Osagie and Prof Theophilus Ndubaku, men who should be resting after many years of serving their fatherland, to go against the interest of the party.

    “Nigerians all over, have asked Ajero to concentrate on his primary assignment to fight for the welfare of workers. The regulatory body in charge of the Labour Union in the Ministry of Labour has also publicly admonished Ajero to excuse himself from matters concerning politics and to face his legitimate assignment as a defender of workers rights.

    “We put it on record that Ajero’s led NLC in all its ramifications has failed the Nigerian workers. Ajero is busy plotting his future political ambition and toiling with the welfare of workers.

    “Over the past few years, instead of the NLC to be in support of the party, and for the party to draw strength from the Labour movement as it’s done in some Scandinavian countries such as in Brazil, Australia etc, what we found in Nigeria is a reversed approach were the NLC which ought to be a source of strength, is constituting itself as a destabilising factor for the Labour Party.

    “Since 2015, this same NLC was the one that set up the Caretaker Committee that is unknown to the party constitution headed by one Salisu Mohammed. If there is any group or persons who have worked against the interest of the Labour Party, it is NLC and Joe Ajero. So he should not shift the blame to any person, he should squarely take responsibility for whatever is happening in the party today.

    “We are also calling on all genuine members of the Labour Party to distance themself from the illegal activities of the Nenadi Usman group and their ploy to manipulate unsuspecting party members from parting with their hard earned money through illegal Congresses they are planning. They do not have the powers to conduct any party activity, congresses inclusive. Be warned.”

  • Ajaero and remote governors

    Ajaero and remote governors

    • By Ike Willie-Nwobu

    Sir: For all its appetite to bicker over wages and welfare of Nigerian workers, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) certainly had a point to make when it highlighted and tackled one issue that has been a source of great embarrassment and consternation to Nigerians.

    According to NLC chairman Comrade Joe Ajaero, most governors in Nigeria’s 36 states now live permanently in Abuja, which is affecting governance in their states with the people they are supposed to govern plunging into more hardship by the day.

    Ajaero stated this during a town hall meeting in Lokoja, the Kogi State aapital, during a visit to commission 10 Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) buses given to the state chapter of NLC to ease hardship. Accoding to Ajaero, the NLC had visited about five zones,  and in all the zones, it was only in one state that they met the governor as the others were always away to  Abuja.

    Nigeria was always set up to be a federation, or at least a shadow of it. The modern evolution of the Nigerian federation comprises 36 states orbiting Abuja, the country’s seat of power. In 1991,the Ibrahim Babangida military supervised the relocation of Nigeria’s capital from Lagos to Abuja, where it has been ever since.

    Since that momentous decision by the military junta led by Babangida who spent eight searing years in power during which he oversaw the annulment of the 1993 elections, Abuja has moved from a sleepy town of vast, empty land to a glamorous city of highrise buildings and luxury. The irresistible pull of government business also draws men and matters alike to the country’s capital like a magnet.

    Looks can be deceptive though, and the rest of the country largely looks nothing like its glamorous capital. With power largely  centralized and concentrated in Abuja, there is added emphasis on the provision of basic amenities and security in the capital. It was always going to be the case with the calibre of individuals that are drawn daily to the country’s capital like moths to light.

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    As Abuja has grown in leaps and bounds to match its status as the Federal Capital Territory, many states rather than grow have shrunk into themselves. While some states have been luckier to have serious and fair-minded people as governors, many states have simply had a torrid time under governors who were too preoccupied with serving themselves and feathering their nests to deliver good governance.

    Over time, this has come to mean that many states have not fulfilled their potentials. While this has happened, the men responsible prefer to live in the glitz and glamour of Abuja, far away from the people who voted them into office.

    The question then is: how can any state governor effectively carry on the business of delivering good governance when they cannot even bear to live in their states? How can they appreciate first-hand what their people are going through when they don’t spend enough time in their state?

    It is downright disgraceful that any state would prefer to live in Abuja rather than the state they govern. It is beyond embarrassing.

    •Ike Willie-Nwobu,

    Ikewilly9@gmail.com

  • Tread softly, Ajaero

    Tread softly, Ajaero

    My initial reaction to the (suspended) protest by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) against the 50 per cent hike in telecoms tariff that should have taken effect on February 1 was to lambast the congress for overreaching itself. Why must Labour think it can jump into just any situation even when the issue is not strictly about workers’ welfare?

    I however, soft-pedalled when I remembered how the Global System for Mobile (GSM) communication service providers exploited Nigerians when they began operation in Nigeria in August 2001. Perhaps the highpoint of that exploitation was their initial refusal to offer per second billing on their menu. They gave us the impression that it was impossible, even though that was available elsewhere.

    But the entry of Globacom in 2003 changed the narrative. Glo launched itself into the Nigerian market with per second billing and others had no choice but to follow.

    It was this reminiscence that made me soft-pedal on the said protest. But then, the position of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) is more like it. It still pointed at the lacuna in the NLC’s stance.

     We would return to that shortly.

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), the telecoms sector’s regulator, had on January 20 approved a 50 per cent hike in tariffs for the telecommunications firms, as against the 100 per cent that the companies had been clamouring for. NCC cited rising operational costs driven by inflation, foreign exchange fluctuations, and higher energy expenses to justify its approval. Unassailable points.

    But the NLC rejected the 50 per cent hike and in its stead pushed forward a five per cent increase. But it never told us how it arrived at the five per cent. It merely said the hike was insensitive and unjustifiable, adding that it would impose an extra burden on Nigerian consumers. Huh!

    Joe Ajaero, the union’s president, said

    “After extensive discussions…NAC-in-session totally rejects the 50 per cent telecom tariff hike, which it considers too harsh for citizens. It, therefore, strongly condemns the Nigerian Communications Commission’s decision to approve the increase.”

    He added: “This decision is insensitive, unjustifiable, and a direct attack on Nigerian workers and the general populace, who are already suffering under worsening economic hardship caused by government policies beyond their control.”

    The congress therefore asked Nigerians to prepare for mass protests against the hike. It also called for a boycott of the telcos’ services.

    But the telecom fìrms stood their ground and insisted on the approved 50 per cent. As a matter of fact, they ruled out negotiations with organised labour. I saw this coming; that a time would come when some organisations would begin to call the NLC’s bluff. More of this would come for as long as the congress thinks banging the table is solution to all problems. That belonged in the past. These days, ideas rule the world.

    The Chairman of the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), Gbenga Adebayo, explained the telcos’ position: “This increase is a lifeline that enables us to survive. Anything lower would be like giving someone who needs 100 litres of oxygen only a fraction—barely enough to keep them alive but insufficient for long-term survival.”

    The stage was thus set for a showdown.

    Mercifully, however, the Federal Government intervened and the protest was suspended.

    For me, the NLC’s action was misdirected aggression. The telcos’ are operating in the same economic milieu that Labour is complaining about and are therefore not immune to its vagaries. Unless the congress wants us to return to the era of queuing up at designated centres to talk to our people wherever they may be on the surface of the earth, the congress has to tread cautiously on this matter.

    Those of us who were around in the days of the almighty Nigerian Telecommunications Ltd. (NITEL) when the entire country was served by about 450,000 telephone lines would never want that. Not even in our dream. Only our children who were born after the introduction of GSM in the country can say whatever they like on the said tariff hike because they do not know where we are coming from.

    For the benefit of our youths, some of whom are now carrying some of the very expensive telephones even as students, there was a time in this country when a minister of the federal republic told us that telephone was not for the poor! It was that bad. But the minister was not wrong; if about 180 million people then had to share 450,000 telephone lines, we did not need anyone to tell us that that was not an essential commodity that every Tom, Dick and Harry should have access to!

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    Today, it is convenient for us to be saying ‘we no go gree’ because telcom firms said they want to review upwards their tariffs. We can now conveniently stay in the comfort of our rooms and talk to Papa and Mama in the village. Today, we can send money to them and they will receive it within minutes. Today, we can talk to our people who have ‘Japa’ to the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, etc., right from wherever we are. Not only that; we can even do video chat, send text messages, chat on various electronic platforms and what have you.

    It has not always been like this. It was the advent of GSM that revolutionised the way we used to do virtually all things – read, relax, work, talk, etc. It has become part of our lives that one feels incomplete if his or her phone is misplaced or stolen. Such a person is like fish out of water.  

    It is not surprising that the GSM Association (commonly referred to as ‘the GSMA’, originally Groupe Spécial Mobile), has welcomed the upward tariff review. And understandably so. GSMA is a non-profit industry organisation that represents the interests of mobile network operators worldwide.

    Workers in the telecoms sector too are happy with the hike. Again, understandably so. Unfortunately, the NLC did not even seek their opinion before threatening fire and brimstone. The workers who spoke through their umbrella union, the Private Telecommunications and Communications Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PTECSSAN) rejected the planned nationwide protest by the NLC. The association told the NLC that the tariff hike, though painful, was necessary to prevent the imminent collapse of the sector, with its far-reaching consequences for the economy.

    PTECSSAN, in apparent solidarity with their employers highlighted the severe challenges facing the sector, including skyrocketing operational costs occasioned by the removal of fuel subsidy, rising prices of diesel (Automated Gas Oil), and increased electricity tariffs.

    The union also mentioned the issue of foreign exchange that the sector sorely needs to import equipment, but which the depreciation of the naira has made increasingly expensive.

    PTECSSAN, of course did not forget to say that while public sector and other private sector workers have benefited from salary increases due to the new minimum wage law, telecoms workers have been left behind simply because their employers could not afford to pay from the inadequate revenue they are generating.

    In conclusion, the association said: “If a situation like this persists, what employers resort to is the termination of employment of workers. We are sure that you and the congress leadership will not be happy to see this happen, as

    we will not”.

    As things stand, the points have been well made. If a sector has retained a particular tariff regime for 12 years, it is more than ripe for another review, given

    the vicissitudes the economy has undergone in recent years that have dramatically altered the economic landscape and so significantly altered the business climate too. Prices have gone up across board since costs too have shot up astronomically.

    It is against this backdrop that the NLC should attend the meetings of the 10-man committee set up by the government and the congress on the issue with an open mind. What is on ground is a purely business matter; not an emotive one. Any attempt to go with a fixated mindset based on emotive arguments or rule of thumb (?) will be counter-productive.

    It was this commonsensical approach to the issue that made the National Civil Society Council of Nigeria (NCSCN) (which says it represents over 600 affiliate organisations) that had initially planned to occupy the headquarters of the NCC and the National Assembly, to also suspend its protest, having been shown the parameters used in arriving at the 50 per cent hike.

    But I wonder why TUC was not involved in the arrangement because it is also a major stakeholder in the matter. As a matter of fact, its position seems to me more unassailable than that of the NLC. Unlike the emotive argument of the congress, TUC dissected the problem well, pointing out the issues that others have identified as reasons necessitating the tariff hike, particularly the foreign exchange component.

    I am not opposed to further negotiations and possibly a further reduction in the tariff. But it is pertinent to let the NLC realise that it cannot be issuing threats all of the time, otherwise the threats would lose their potency. The fact of the matter is that telecommunications is not one of the sectors that the government is subsidising. The service providers are

    in business to make profit. They are therefore not bound by threats of boycott or protest by the congress or whoever. The NLC should not be behaving like policemen who intervene in every matter, including helping their friends or relations to recover loans or stolen property, which is not their core responsibility.

    People have a choice to use or not to use telephone, or at least regulate their use of it if it becomes expensive. As we say, no matter how tiny the hand of the rat is; it is that same hand that it uses to scratch its ear (bi owo eku ti mo lo se nfi yun eti). How much people enjoy the white man depends on their pockets.

    If the telcos say they cannot go below what the NCC has approved if they must maintain quality service, so be it. Let subscribers regulate their use of phones. Nigerians should not forward march to the better-forgotten past.

    We all know how frustrating it is to make calls that drop or send messages that don’t get delivered. We know what it means to be in a hurry online only for network not to cooperate because service providers are not getting commensurate charges to maintain their facilities.

     NLC cannot arrogate to itself the duty of a price control agency because that is what it is attempting to do in this case. Unless NLC provides concrete evidence that the telcos had been overcharging Nigerians, its reaction to this tariff hike is analogous to blaming waiters in restaurants for obesity.

  • Fuel price increase undermines new minimum wage, says Ajaero

    Fuel price increase undermines new minimum wage, says Ajaero

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has raised concerns over the recent hike in fuel prices, saying the increase has nullified the benefits of the new minimum wage.

    NLC President Joe Ajaero described the situation as dire, even as he lamented the severe impact of the price surge on workers’ purchasing power.

    Ajaero, speaking on Friday, September 20, in Lagos at the 2024 National Minimum Wage Implementation workshop for the South, said: “The hike in fuel price has worsened the misery of Nigerians.”

    He also criticised the government’s failure to fulfill its promise of revamping the country’s refineries, a move that could have lessened the dependency on imported fuel and stabilised prices.

    The labour leader accused the authorities of deliberately frustrating local efforts, particularly those aimed at increasing domestic fuel production, such as the Dangote refinery project.

    “What Nigerians witnessed in the last two weeks was a deliberate attempt to frustrate Dangote,” he alleged.

    The workshop, themed ‘Strategies for Effective Implementation of the 2024 National Minimum Wage Act’, was designed to equip union leaders with the necessary tools to ensure that workers fully benefit from the wage law.

    Ajaero stressed the importance of moving beyond celebrating the legislation to ensuring that it translates into meaningful improvements in workers’ lives.

    “Our goal is not just to celebrate the passage of the law; it is to make sure every worker feels its impact in their daily lives,” he said.

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    Ajaero also called on the union members to remain vigilant and dedicated to their cause.

    “You are the vessels through which this victory will be delivered to our members. You must be strong, focused, and unwavering,” he said, urging them to maintain integrity in their fight for workers’ rights.

    “Our hands must remain unsullied, our hearts pure so that when the enemies of our movement come, they will find nothing to use against us,” he added.

    Touching on his recent arrest, Ajaero accused the government of attempting to silence him and the broader labour movement. But he assured the members that the movement’s spirit remained unbroken.

    “I was arrested and detained by the state, a clear attempt to intimidate and silence our movement. But they can imprison our bodies, but they cannot imprison our spirit. Together, we will overcome,” he affirmed.