Tag: Ajaero

  • BREAKING: Police invite NLC President Ajaero over alleged treason, terrorism financing

    BREAKING: Police invite NLC President Ajaero over alleged treason, terrorism financing

    The Nigeria Police Force has invited the National President of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) Comrade Joe Ajaero for questioning in connection with criminal conspiracy, terrorism financing, treasonable felony, subversion and cybercrime.

    The invitation was contained in a letter by the Deputy Commissioner of Police at the Intelligence Response Team (IRT), Department of Force Intelligence.

    The letter also warned that failure to attend could lead to his arrest.

    The letter of invitation signed by the Assistant Commissioner of Police, Adamu Mu’azu on behalf of the Deputy Commissioner, dated August 19 titled Letter of invitation, reads in part: “This office is investigating a case of Criminal Conspiracy, Terrorism Financing, Treasonable Felony, Subversion and Cybercrime in which you were mentioned.

    “You are therefore invited to interview the undersigned on Tuesday 20th August, 2024 by 10:00 a.m. prompt, at IRT Complex, Old Abattoir by Guzape Junction, Abuja, through the Team Leader with telephone No 08035179870 in connection with the above investigation.

    “Be informed that in the event of failing to honour this letter, this office will have no alternative than to activate a warrant of arrest against you please.”

  • Kill bandits, not protesters, Ajaero tells Police

    Kill bandits, not protesters, Ajaero tells Police

    President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Comrade Joe Ajaero has appealed to police authorities not to kill peaceful protesters. 

    Rather, he said they should focus on killing bandits. 

    He urged President Bola Tinubu to address the current national issue and deliver answers to all of the demands of the protesters.

    Ajaero said: “With unconfirmed reports putting casualties at 40+ in two days of managing the EndHunger protest across the country, we have sufficient reasons (backed up by reports and video clips) to question the professionalism of our security personnel as this represents nothing but MASSACRE of citizens.

    “Had the security personnel deployed the same thoughtless brutal precision against bandits or other criminals, our country would have been an eldorado. As the lead-agency in internal security management, the police bear the burden of this massacre.”

    Read Also: Ajaero urges FG to explore alternative medicine in Nigeria

    Ajaero said Kaduna police command under the watch of Audu Ali Dabigi, a Commissioner of Police, “represents the worst case scenario in which one of the fleeing protesters was heard on camera desperately appealing to the deployed police personnel not to shoot until his voice was drowned by a hail of bullets with the resultant death of a protester on the spot and several injured.”

    He added: “In the same breadth, Edo State Police Command under the personal command of COMPOL Funsho Adegboroye represents the best in crowd management as he could be heard interacting and cajoling the protesters and almost effortlessly bringing them under control.

    “It might be convenient to argue that the two states do have different socio-cultural milieux, however, an incontestable truth common to both, and indeed, all the states is that human life is sacred and should never be taken.

  • BREAKING: NLC’s demand for ₦250,000 minimum wage stands, Ajaero says

    BREAKING: NLC’s demand for ₦250,000 minimum wage stands, Ajaero says

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) President, Comrade Joe Ajaero, has affirmed that the demand for a minimum wage of ₦250,000 remains firm.

    Despite an agreement between the federal government and the organized private sector on ₦62,000, the labour union is steadfast in its insistence on ₦250,000.

    Before submitting the new minimum wage law to the National Assembly, President Bola Tinubu expressed the need for additional time to consult with relevant stakeholders.

    Speaking to State House Correspondents on Thursday, July 11, after a meeting with President Tinubu and other labour leaders, Ajaero clarified that the purpose of the meeting was to discuss rather than negotiate.

    Read Also: Ajaero urges FG to explore alternative medicine in Nigeria

    He added that the meeting would continue next week.

    Following more than an hour of discussion, labour leaders informed State House correspondents that they would return to the presidential house and return to the people.

    Details shortly…

  • Ajaero urges FG to explore alternative medicine in Nigeria

    Ajaero urges FG to explore alternative medicine in Nigeria

    •As NLC admits new union

    The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, has called for serious exploration of herbal medicine in Nigeria and its integration into the country’s mainstream health system.

    The NLC president said this would boost access to healthcare and grow the nation’s economy.

    Ajaero said this when the leadership of NLC received the newly registered member of the Congress – the National Association of Herbal Medicine Employers (NAHME).

    The newly registered union was at the NLC headquarters to formally present their certificate of registration and officially declare their affiliation with the NLC.

    Ajaero stressed the need for the Federal Government to explore herbal medicine as an alternative to the conventional.

    Read Also: Beach Volleyball: Nigeria wins U19 Girls Nations Cup

    He also noted the potential of herbal medicine to generate trillions of naira for the country through exports.

    The NLC leader stressed the need for the government to establish herbal hospitals to further legitimise traditional medicine within the country’s healthcare system.

    He further called for ethical practices and proper research within the sector to uphold standards and ensure efficacy in treatment.

    Ajaero said: “If herbal medicine or alternative medicine is explored in Nigeria, the country will be making trillions through exports of these drugs, and that is an area that I would tell the Nigerian government, that since they are thinking of ways of diversifying the economy, they consider exploring it adequately.”

  • Ajaero urges fed govt to explore alternative medicine in Nigeria

    Ajaero urges fed govt to explore alternative medicine in Nigeria

    …as NLC admits new union

    The president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, has called for serious exploration of herbal medicine in Nigeria and its integration into the country’s mainstream health system.

    The NLC president said this would boost access to healthcare and grow the nation’s economy.

    Ajaero said this when the leadership of NLC received the newly registered member of the Congress – National Association of Herbal Medicine Employers (NAHME).

    The newly registered union was at the NLC headquarters to formally present their certificate of registration and officially declare their affiliation with the NLC.

    Ajaero stressed the need for the Federal Government to explore herbal medicine as an alternative to the conventional.

    He also noted the potential of herbal medicine to generate trillions of Naira for the country through exports.

    The NLC leader stressed the need for the government to establish herbal hospitals to further legitimise traditional medicine within the country’s healthcare system.

    He stressed the efficacy of herbal medicine, rooted in Nigerian culture, asserting its relevance in tackling indigenous health challenges.

    The NLC president expressed concern about the reliance on imported pharmaceuticals amidst foreign exchange challenges, proposing the advancement of local herbal remedies as a sustainable alternative.

    He further called for ethical practices and proper research within the sector to uphold standards and ensure efficacy in treatment.

    Read Also: Ajaero’s rabble rousing and Obasanjo’s plain truth

    Ajaero said: “We understand the importance of herbal medicine but it is still a vague area that we need to explore especially for a country like Nigeria, where the economy is not booming.

    “Ordinarily, we should explore this herbal medicine or alternative medicine as they will call it, to the extent that it will be a revenue earner for the country, that we will be exporting our drugs to other countries, and that people can be coming into the country for treatment with our own drugs. That this issue of herbal medicine and alternative medicine being regulated was part of the problems we inherited from the whites. When they came in here, our religion, our way of life, our way of dressing, everything went down. But, from independence, Nigerians have started going back to their roots. And I do not see why we should not go back to our roots.

    “If herbal medicine or alternative medicine is explored in Nigeria, the country will be making trillions through exports of these drugs, and that is an area that I would tell the Nigerian government, that since they are thinking of ways of diversifying the economy, they consider exploring it adequately.

    “The potency of herbal medicine is not in doubt. There are elements that you cannot trace their genealogy to English culture. It is rooted in Nigerian culture. And it is clear that we know the solution. Because those illnesses are indigenous to this place.”

    President of NAHME, Yemi Areola, said: “Herbal medicine can help our country in many ways. It can contribute to the GDP and growth of the economy as it is with countries like China, India, and many others. It can equally help to save the lives of many people who cannot afford orthodox medicine. We need government intervention to move forward.”

    General Secretary of the union, Chief Oluyori Francis said: “Our government needs to value herbal medicine and consider it as an alternative to orthodox and a means of gaining money for the country. Like other countries of the world, we have the capacity to heal our sick people and contribute to the economic growth of the country.

    “We are a registered union today by God’s grace. We need more recognition and support from the government.”

  • Ajaero’s rabble rousing and Obasanjo’s plain truth

    Ajaero’s rabble rousing and Obasanjo’s plain truth

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo and many persons, including myself, are rarely on the same page. The trouble is  his penchant to assume that all governments, except his, are inept – that is, they have small grey matter or none. Last week, however, we became jolly good fellows when he told Nigerians  the plain truth about why the economy is wracked and  they are poor in the midst of plenty. That plain truth is that Nature has blessed us with plenty of fertile, arable land, but we are too lazy to cultivate it, are therefore hungry, dependent on less- blessed people in other parts of the earth to feed us, needlessly throwing valuable money away, distressing our economy and currency, the Naira, and creating jobs in other nations.

    On the other side of the coin, Joe Ajaero, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President, and Festus Osifo, his counterpart in the Trade Union Congress (TUC), were busy rabble-rousing the rustic population for a #400,000 plus minimum wage for messengers (office assistants, cleaners, and other low-grade workers). They would not settle for less, such as the #62,000 the Federal Government has already considered or the #70,000 outgoing Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo State has promised to pay. Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo have said nothing about what happened when the national minimum wage shifted from #18,000 to #30,000 about five years ago. They have not said that, up till now, some state governments, especially in the North, have been unable to pay #30,000. This has left these state governments open to the harassment of local and national labour leaders, formenting  work stoppages,and crippling local

    economies, which will inevitably impact the national.

    Read Also: Democracy Day: LP wants Tinubu to make public offices unattractive

    In this design, Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo have failed to recognise or deliberately declined to remember that Nigeria began its journey as a federal country, was degraded into unitary federalism by frivolous soldiers who truncated the “dreams of our heroes past,” and is struggling under the incumbent Administration to return to true Federalism.  In TRUE FEDERALISM, there would be no uniformity of minimum NATIONAL WAGES. Each state would pay only what it can afford. If it wished to pay more because its workers are demanding bigger wages, the government and the workers would have to work harder to earn more money. Nigeria’s 50 million households are like that. No government can force me by law how much I should give my wife for housekeeping, how many times a day we should eat beans or bread, or if I must provide money for beef or original titus fish, all of which I can hardly afford these days. Were the Nigerian population not largely rustic, Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo could have been asked: From your calculations, how much more money does the NLC and the TUC intend to earn from a super bumper harvest of bumper check-off dues from workers’ salaries?

    FRANKLY…

    To be frank, Nigeria is not broke and should be able to pay reasonable living wages,”All things being equal” as economist say. We are not broke, but there is no money on the table. So, blind spending may upset several apple carts. We may disagree with this and ask: How are their Lordships at the Supreme Court going to earn about #5 million every month when  the poorest man or woman  on the pay ladder cannot  earn #615,000 or #450,000 or #100,000 every month? The bottom line is the value of the worker. Can the minimum wage earner, (the messenger or office assistant, cleaner, tea boy or driver)perform the tasks of any of any Supreme Court Justice? Are their jobs not  dispensable, as they have become in many private businesses? If matters came to a head, can the Chief Justice not clean his office or toilet? Do we not all do it at  homes? Do I not wash my dishes and clothes? There is a mistake many persons keep making about MINIMUM WAGE. It is the salary for the least qualified person in the system, the SSCE school leaver who is under 20 and just hanging on a job to take him out of home before he or she goes on to the niversity or polytechnic. When Labour speaks of a man or woman with three children, this must be a 30-something-year-old person who must have wasted about 10 years doing nothing with his or her life beyond being a messenger or cleaner, in disobedience of the LAW OF MOTION. This natural law compels us to keep moving like the rotating and revolving Earth, the flowing air and clouds, and the waves of the sea, among other examples. A person who cannot add value to his or her life as he or she goes is a parasitic danger to the economy. It is the life of this fellow  British Prime Minister Margret Thatcher refused to subsidise. FRANKLY, when I say there is no money on the table for exorbitant minimum wage for fresh school leavers who ideally should be on this wage, the story-line is this:

    •Nigeria is the sixth-largest producer of crude oil on Earth and the largest in Africa.

    •A mafia still controls the crude oil industry and market, despite the removal of pump price subsidies.

    • The Buharia Administration took huge loans speculated to be more than  $4 billion  to be settled with crude oil deliveries over several years ahead.

    • With much of the crude oil traded off,  little is left for export.

    • About half of the little left for export is stolen every day.

    • The government thought of beating the Mafia by making the refineries work. It counted on Dangote Refinery, Africa’s biggest, which has a larger production capacity than all of Nigeria’s refineries combined. Dangote Refinery had been ready for work for six months but cannot get crude oil from Nigeria to refine and bring pump prices down. Even when other Nigerian refineries (Warri, Port Harcourt, and Kaduna) restart production, they would have to buy crude oil from abroad, and this will change nothing in the pump price, making fuel subsidy still necessary. Couldn’t this be what we are experiencing now?

    • On the sidelines, several licensed modular refineries say no bank would release money to them to start work since they cannot get crude oil to buy from home.

    • The way things stand, it would appear that international oil companies lifting crude oil cannot be forced but only persuaded to give Nigerian refineries crude oil to refine.

    • In other words, there is an old song and a new song upstream and mid stream in the oil industry. The old song says we have to import refined oil from abroad because the refineries are not working. The new song says the refineries are now working, but there is no home grown crude to give them. Thus, they have to shut down or import crude. That means pump prices will remain high at present levels, and an underground subsidy racket will protect against excruciating prices caused by global economic disorders.

    Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo know this story. Why does Labour not think it is better for it and the nation to force disclosures on what is going on, even go to court if need be? Then, it would be a really fighting Labour, one cleaning up the country and the economy for everyone and not just rabble-rousing for the benefit of a few government workers.

    SCALA MOTION

    In high school Physics in the late 1970s, we learned that SCALA MOTION was movement without movement. What progress have  labour  leaders achieved for workers since, say, 1944 under Pa  Michael IMOUDU, other than waging war on employers of labour for bigger salaries to better cope with the economic vicissitudes of a society down sliding year after year? Pa IMOUDU led what was then the biggest nation-wide strike for cost of LIVING AWARDS (COLS). From COLS, labour moved on to other humongous general pay rises, including the UDOJI AWARDS, which were meant to be instalmentally released but were unleashed in one go  by the Yakubu Gowon military administration with disastrous Inflamatory impact. From then on, other general pay rises pushed prices up. Pepper and tomatoes sellers, like other dispensers of goods and services, being no fools, collected their own “award” from the awardees. Soon, the workers came back crying for more. Each time they got more, prices either rose alone or were accompanied by several job cuts. Is that where Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo are leading them again? If you doubt it, remember that today we have 1.9 million POINT OF SALE (POS) operators nation-wide. There are banking hall jobs outside the banking halls. In banking halls, they would be university graduates. Outside the banking halls, they may be SSCE drop outs or even okro sellers or cow sellers. The banks discovered their salary bills were too high and decided to shed monstrous weight. Before they did that, the banks brought in machines, which swept recharge card sellers nation-wide out of jobs.

    Beyond their fortified POS, the banks now employ university graduates as contract staff who can be dismissed at will. Machines are replacing human labour, and there is nothing labour has been able to do other than push up the wage bill and invite more machines. Recently, a confused NLC and TUC have been fighting electricity companies for pushing up tariffs and asking them at the same time to increase wages. Does it not matter that electricity companies buy raw materials to produce electricity  and that when producers of those raw materials pay bigger wages, they would  transfer the extra bill? The staff of these electricity companies were the first to hammer down the economy. They were like children who did not know what they were doing. They were increasing the cost of production in their company with their demands and pressing for tariff freeze. If electricity tariffs go up, will they not pay more for frozen foods and factory products? Will they not pay their doctors and pharmacies more? Will the school fees not rise? Who will freeze  transport fares? How much will they now be paying for gari, tomatoes, pepper, yam, okro, rice, and beans, for example?

    NATURE’S EXAMPLE

    In contrast to mankind, Nature does not go on strike. It harnesses all the forces animating the FOUR ELEMENTS, namely Earth, water, Air, and Fire. They give back to us what we give to them to cast our environment from. They don’t echo to us what we did not speak to them. Thus, the Earth forever brings food for us. The Air never ceases to flow, purifying itself of our pollutants. Are the rivers not forever productive? Crayfish, periwinkles, Titus, Salmon, oysters, etc have not gone out of circulation despite the immensely growing human population worldwide and their increasing demands on marshland, streams, rivers, lakes, seas, and oceans, and all other water bodies. This should be a serious matter the work stoppages happy worker should contemplate. And FIRE? It is in the bowels of the Earth and erupts occasionally as volcanoes or earthquakes. If it cools off, the Earth would become unable to support human existence. Fire is in the sun and in the stars. If we move too near them, we would roast to ash. If the earth moved too far away from them, we would all freeze to death. An intelligence higher and more noble than selfish human intelligence is  behind this Natural order.

    Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo are Christians,. I guess in  church every Sunday, they say the LORD’S PRAYER, making the following solemn promises thereby… “OUR FATHER, WHO ART IN HEAVEN, HALLOW BE THY NAME, THY KINGDOM COME, THY WILL BE DONE ON EARTH, AS IT IS IN HEAVEN…”. Unfaithful beings we all are. We pledge our lives for the coming of THE KINGDOM OF GOD ON EARTH and vow that we are dedicated to HIS WILL being fulfilled on earth as it is done in HEAVEN. Funny enough, THE FOUR ELEMENTS are showing us evidence of this WILL in the unfailing provision of services to human beings on earth, and we humans are not  taking a cue from them.

    OIL REFINERIES

    There was distressing news last week. About 20 potential foreign investors in the small petroleum refineries sector the government has been wooing re-considered their agreements whem  the national grid, heart beat of any nation  was switched off. Who will be the loser if they ultimately stay away? Capital inflow from other sectors may be hacked likewise. That would mean more jobs cannot be created in the Eldorado Joe Ajaero and Festus Osifo wish to create for a  few government workers. If the private sector succumbs to the Eldorado, prices will go up. If prices are maintained to encourage sales, jobs would go.

    REAL MOTION

    Scientists tell us the universe is expanding. Labour should follow the footsteps of Nature and join those forces seeking to expand the economy. Can Labour not bid for modular petroleum refineries in each geopolitical zone and build its own filling stations nationwide? Can Labour not set up model large-scale town or city farms in the forests to create new towns and cities and reduce unemployment? Can Labour not establish model universities and polytechnics which address all its present complaints about higher education? Labour burned its fingers and failed in the Transportation sector. Where are the Labour Mass Transit Buses launched with fanfare?

    OBASANJO’S SUGGESTIONS

    In his intuitive moments when his intellect vacates the throne for his Spirit, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in the view of many persons, sees right and acts so. All of us are like that when we do not allow our brains to show us the way in any matter. We are not meant to be thinking but intuitive or knowing persons whose thoughts merely implement wishes of the Spirit. This, the former President would say last week that the major problem of Nigeria is that the food import bill is too high. In other words, he was knocking the heads of advocates of free or open borders and saying we are poor and hungry because we are too lazy to feed ourselves despite an abundance of arable land and one of the finest weather on earth. I agree with him. I salute also the incumbent President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who last week promised that Nigeria would grow 25 million trees just about anywhere by 2030 and that schools must be involved.

    Since the inauguration of the Tinubu Presidency, I have been publishing suggestions on this page and posting on FACEBOOK at JOHN OLUFEMI KUSA on how Nigeria can produce trillions of pawpaw fruits and farm also trillions of rabbits every year to replace cow meat. Before I return to former President Olusegun Obasanjo, I wish to say President Tinubu should not limit the 25 million trees to ornamentals otherwise, they would not address the food question, reduce the food import bill, and make money available for important activities in the economy. In those FACEBOOK posts, I mentioned plantain and bananas as well. We are told yam and potatoes should be cheaper next year because many households are growing yam in empty and cleaned cement or rice sacks. Thanks to Udeme James, the front and back of my house are now like a mini-forest. We have yam, cocoayam, plantain, banana, vegetables. We are working on snails and rabbits.  If Nigerians can see the Minister of Agriculture and his family working on their home garden, the revolution would roar. That was what former Head of State Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo attempted to achieve in the 1970s with OPERATION FEED THE NATION, which later grew into the GREEN REVOLUTION. We were not all hungry then. Today, the population has grown from 55 million in 1963 to about 220 million, while lands for land tenure and subsistence farming have given way to housing, and banditry, kidnapping and  killing on farms have significantly silenced farming.

    Back to former President…

    Check the natural blessings of Nigeria and Ukraine, one of the countries which feeds Nigeria

    • POPULATION (Nigeria – 229 million, Ukraine – 41 million)

    • ARABLE LAND (Nigeria – 34 million hectares, Ukraine – 32 million hectares)

    • IN PEACE or AT WAR (Nigeria battles internally with kidnappers, Jihadists, and bandits, while Ukraine has been in full-scale war with neighbouring Russia, a super power, for more than two years). The picture is clear. Nigeria is a lazy country. Consider also the following:

    • Lagos State alone consumes more than 100,000 cows daily, most of them imported at an average cost of #300,000 per cow. This amounts to #30,000,000,000 daily, #900,000,000,000 monthly,  or #10,800,000,000,000 yearly. This is homongus money exiting the borders. Can we not farm trillions of rabbits and millions of goats nationwide every year to cut the import budget, as former President Obasanjo suggests? The recipes are in the FACEBOOK posts at JOHN OLUFEMI KUSA. They come from the review of the work of an NGO I was involved with in the early 2000s. Former Bendel State military governor  Brigadier Samuel Ogbemudia was the chairman, and former President Shehu Shagari  the life patron. Can the NLC and TUC not present a budget on this to the nation to force down meat price, rather than rabble-rousing  for inflation?

  • Ajaero’s many strikes

    Ajaero’s many strikes

    Nigerians are groaning under the weight of food inflation which in March this year stood at 41.1 % as a result of the devaluation of the naira and high importation of food items. It is the same with transport inflation which currently stands at about 30% because of government unavoidable removal of fuel subsidy scam costing the country N3trillion loss yearly and consequent increase in pump price of imported petrol. Government has continued to appeal to Nigerians for more sacrifice while assuring us of greater gains after the current pains.

    While most enlightened Nigerians identified with government plea that we cannot have omelette without first breaking an egg, many believe Nigerians are being asked to pay for the sins of unpatriotic Nigerians especially in the oil and banking sector responsible for our current economic nightmare. It was for this reason government came up with some palliatives and also set up a tripartite body of 37 members with organized Labour to look at the issue of minimum wage in the country.

    Unfortunately, as it has turned out, if Joe Ajaero who has not been able to distance himself from the Labour Party and his group are not playing politics, they are out rightly incompetent. While it often takes as much as a year to negotiate a minimum wage in other climes, what manner of Labour leader after two strikes in less than a year, would declare  a third one, arrogantly labelled  “indefinite strike” without a thought for the health of the economy of a nation in distress?

    The immediate cause of Ajaero’s current indefinite strike was because of a stall in negotiation by the tripartite body set up by government that has offered N60,000 as minimum wage as against Organized Private Sector’s (OPS)  N57,000 and Ajaero Labour’s unrealistic N476,000. Obsessed with the federal government headed by their political foe, Ajaero and organized labour forgot that besides the federal government, other stakeholders include the 36 states of the federation, 15 of who are yet to fully implement the N30,000 minimum wage approved by President Buhari in 2019  and 774 LGAs battling for survival.                                                       

    For any competent labour leader, as observed by Daniel Bwala (Atiku’s former spokesman) on TVC programme on Monday, figures presented during wage negotiation must be based on available and verified government resources .The starting point according to him is to find out how much is accruing to government, its distribution and identifying sectors Labour believes can be starved of funds to accommodate its own demand.

    In other words, Ajaero and his group ought to know that the main source of government revenue is taxation: (personal income tax, corporate tax, excise duties, export and import duties, royalties from oil and other minerals, government domestic borrowings through sale of government securities through stock exchange and external borrowings through bonds for long term government loans or borrowings from IMF or World Bank and foreign grants.)

    The above revenue figures can be accessed  by labour leaders during budget debate and budget public hearing  while the  concurrent and capital expenditures the revenues  are to cover can also be scrutinized.

    But instead of going through this constitutional process, what did Ajaero and his fellow politicians masquerading as union leaders do? They came up with arbitrary figures they claimed was based on cost of feeding an individual member of a family of six thrice a day for one month, citing the current price of imported bag of rice.

    But we don’t need to be labour leaders to know that minimum wage is for starters and not for a family of six. In any case, when did the number of children a family decides to have become the criteria for fixing minimum wage in a nation operating a market driven economy?  We can as well advance Labour’s sloppy argument by saying since Islam allows adherents to marry four wives and indeed a member of the federal legislature once displayed his four wives and some two dozen children on the floor of the house, we might as well settle for four wives and 22 children as the basis for arriving at a minimum wage.

    Read Also: Minimum wage: Committee adjourns to allow Finance Minister meet deadline

     It is surprising that in their overenthusiasm to shut the nation and its wobbling economy down indefinitely, over their proposed unrealistic figures of N475, 000 for a cleaner or a messenger, they forgot the monster we are currently fighting is inflation.  Precisely because they believe they can intimidate the federal government and the state government including Imo State where they were once involved in fisticuffs with party rivals, they pretended they did not know that they cannot force private sector to give what they cannot afford or dissuade them from downsizing. A Senior Advocate of Nigeria invited to throw more light on the issue by ARISE TV on Monday evening did not weigh words. If asked to pay Labour’s unrealistic minimum wage, he would reduce number of lawyers in his chambers by half, he declared.

    But more disturbing is the way Ajaero and his ill-trained labour leaders behave as if they are above the law. Their first strike just as this government was taking off was said to be illegal. Their current indefinite strike has been declared illegal by the well-respected Minister of Justice and Attorney General. And as if to confirm Ajaero’s penchant for behaving as if he is above the law of the land, last Monday in addition to ordering hospitals and international airports across the country be shut down, he also shut down the national grid, an illegal act that constitute a threat to national security.

    President Tinubu is an avowed democrat who believes in the rule of law. And this is why he must ensure those engaged in illegal and callous shutting down of the national grid must be made to face the law. And with three strikes in one year, two of which were illegal, it is apparent, Ajaero’s goal is not workers’ welfare but destabilizing the country. We could not have suddenly forgotten that some members of his party called for military take-over following their electoral defeat in 2023.

    Kano sibling spiritual wars

     Lamido Sanusi’s sermon at last Friday prayers centred on the need for Muslims to accept their destiny for good or for bad: “We must believe whatever happens to us is predetermined and what we couldn’t have is also from God”. For those who claim religion is the opium of the poor, the Hausa masses who literarily worship their emir and spiritual leader are not complaining over their lot in life? On his path, by focusing on the theme of contentment, Sanusi is doing his job of preventing social dislocations by those who live in abject poverty while emirs live in opulence or as Fela put it. (Suffer suffer for earth enjoy for heaven while the Pope and Iman de enjoy for earth).

    A few years back, Sanusi also paid glowing tribute to his grandfather who supervised the famous Kano groundnut pyramids and his father who attended one of the best universities in the world. Sanusi, the father or the son, didn’t need to be troubled that the children of labourers who laboured day and night to cultivate the groundnut farms while emirs sent their own children to the best universities in the world, ended up as labourers. After all the policy of feudalism is ‘labourers born labourers’.  And precisely because  emirs’ word among the ruled, rich or poor, is law, his admonition to Ado Bayero, the deposed cousin he replaced  to accept his destiny, is in order.                                          

  • Why we proposed N615k as minimum wage, by NLC boss Ajaero

    Why we proposed N615k as minimum wage, by NLC boss Ajaero

    The national president of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, has explained the reasons behind proposing N615,000 as the minimum wage to the federal government. 

    Ajaero, who paid a courtesy visit to The Nation headquarters in Lagos on Thursday, May 9, said the economic realities in country informed the decision to make the proposal to the government. 

    He said though there were misconceptions about the proposal, the NLC arrived at the figure to make lives better for the workers. 

    He stated: “There are misconceptions about the proposed N615, 000, but we don’t have choice and if we are asked to represent it today it will increase. The tarrif was not there when we made the proposal but things are hard now.

    Read Also: Joe Ajaero, Yahaya Bello, bedroom horrors of father of six

    “We looked at food, medicals, education, and other utilities. We didn’t make provision for communication, offering and the likes. Those are some of the things we took into cognisance before we arrived at N615k. 

    “We think it is better for us to explain to Nigerians for them to understand us better. The removal of subsidy also affected everything. Probably, if the subsidy was not removed, we would have suggested N80k.”

    Details shortly… 

  • Living wage should be N615K – Ajaero

    Living wage should be N615K – Ajaero

    The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Joe Ajaero has said that the living wage for workers should be N615, 000.

    Ajaero stated this while speaking during an interview on Channels Television on Wednesday.

    The Nation reported that the Federal Government has approved an increase of between 25 per cent and 35 per cent in salary for civil servants across various consolidated salary structures.

    Ajaero said that the 35 per cent pay rise of the federal government civil servants was mischievous, he also added that the last minimum wage of N30,000 expired on April 18.

    He said: “We should be in the regime of new minimum wage as of today. Discussions were supposed to have been concluded.

    “The federal government through the national assembly legislated on it. But we saw that the discussion entered voice mail because the federal government refused to reconvene the meeting that was adjourned.

    “I think the announcement now appears mischievous because there is no wage increase that government is announcing. For them to announce it now, it is an issue that we are worried about at the NLC and even at the TUC.”

    Ajaero said the Organised Labour has agreed on N615,000 as the living wage for civil servants.

    The NLC leader said: “Living wage is such that will, at least keep you alive. It is not a wage that will make you poor and poorer. It is not a wage that will make you borrow to go to work. It is not a wage that will lead you to be in the hospital everyday because of malnutrition. For that living wage, we have tried to look at N615,000.”

    On what the 615k would consist, he said: “Let me give you a breakdown of how we arrived at that figure. We have housing and accommodation of N40,000. We asked for electricity of N20,000 — of course that was before the current tariff increase. Nobody can spend this amount currently. We have utility that is about N10,000. We looked at kerosene and gas that is about N25,000 to N35,000.

    Read Also: Leave Abure alone, LP supporters tell Ajaero

    “We looked at food for a family of six, that is about N9,000 in a day. For 30 days, that is about N270,000. Look at medical, N50,000 provided there will be no surgery or whatever.

    “For clothing, we looked at N20,000. For education, N50,000. I don’t know for those who tried to put their children in private school, they will not be able to cope with this amount. We also have sanitation of N10,000.

    “I think where we have another bulk of the money is transportation. This is because the workers stay in the fringes and because of the cost of PMS, that amounted to N110,000.

    “That brought the whole living wage to N615,000 and I want anyone to subject this to further investigation and find out whether there will be any savings when you pay somebody on this rate.”

  • Leave Abure alone, LP supporters tell Ajaero

    Leave Abure alone, LP supporters tell Ajaero

    • Party loyalists storm venue of NLC stakeholders’ meeting

    Some Labour Party (LP) supporters yesterday stormed the venue of a stakeholders’ meeting convened by the Political Commission of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), warning NLC President Joe Ajaero to stop interfering in the affairs of the party.

    At the meeting, which held at the AGNL Garden (events and entertainment complex) at Gudu in Abuja, the LP members asked Ajaero to focus on “fighting the anti-people policies of the Federal Government” instead of fighting the party’s National Chairman Julius Abure.

    Read Also: LP supporters storm NLC stakeholders meeting, ask Ajaero to leave Abure alone

    The supporters accused Ajaero of plotting to take over the affairs of the party.

    The crisis within the party deepened last month with the founding fathers of the party calling for the sack of Abure.

    The LP national chairman was returned at last month’s national convention of thje party in Awka, the Anambra State capital.

    The outcome of the convention exacerbated the crisis in the party with the Board of Trustees (BoT) announcing the takeover of the affairs of the party.