Tag: Governors’ Forum

  • Minimum wage war

    Minimum wage war

    The declaration by the Governors’ Forum on why states may not be able to continue with the N18, 000 minimum wage has set them on a collision course with the organised labour. Tony Akowe in this report takes a look at the looming labour crisis

    Another labour crisis may be brewing if state governors have their way and get the rest of the country to acquiesce to their plea to scrap the N18, 000 national minimum wage.

    Of course, the reason the state governors mooted for their decision to seek a downward review of the minimum wage is due to the dwindling oil receipts.

    However, a cross-section of experts and analysts while ventilating their views on the purported plan to end the minimum wage, argued that a downward review at this point in time is calling for prolonged strike action which will no doubt cripple activities across the federation.

    “Even though many of the states have had to rely on a bailout fund from the federal government to pay salaries of workers, some of who are still yet to be paid, it is evident that the governors are not ready to improve on their internally generated revenue, but to go cap in hand every month to the federations account for hand outs to administer their states,” one of the analysts stressed.

     

    Mixed feelings over wage review

    Chairman of the Nigeria Governors Forum and Zamfara state governor, Abdulaziz Yari announced that due to the current state of the economy and the slide in prices of oil in the international market, they will not be able to continue the payment of the minimum wage.

    He said: “We resolved that we must look at ways to enhance revenue generation and at the same time look at ways to cut our overhead costs more especially the political office holders’ salaries and other overhead expenses. The situation is no longer the same when we were asked to pay N18,000 minimum wage, when oil price was $126 (per barrel) and continued paying N18,000 minimum wage when the oil is $41 and the source of government expenditure is from oil, and we have not seen prospects in the oil industry in the near future. We will diversify our economy in the area of agriculture and mining.

    “But at the same time, we should understand our situation where some of us (states) today are taking N100million take home  (monthly allocation) and then have salaries in particular of over N2billion to pay. We therefore agreed here to take this suggestion to NEC in our meeting.”

    The current national minimum wage which organised labour say is due for an upward review was a product of a long drawn battle between workers and government.

    Edo state governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole who was part of the negotiation believes that it was out of place for any of the governors to question the wisdom behind the payment of the N18,000 minimum wage to workers.

    While some of the governors who claimed that they cannot pay the minimum wage argued that it was imposed on them by the federal government, Oshiomhole said it was not imposed on the government but rather it was a product of agreement between government and labour.

    Oshiomhole who is a former President of the NLC, said at a meeting of labour leaders in Abuja that democracy must not be run at the convenience of state governors.

    Apparently siding with his old constituency, the diminutive governor said: “I’m a labour man, I have been clear with my colleagues in seeking to find solution to the problem we face. We have to be holistic. We cannot at one hand question the wisdom behind the national minimum wage. I joined the NLC to protest to the National Assembly when they were going to amend the constitution to make the minimum wage a concurrent issue. I said workers have a stake in this democracy. They are the ones who could afford to march the streets and they march the streets for democracy.”

    For better emphasis, he said: “Democracy doesn’t have to run at the comfort or convenience of governors, ministers, and presidents. I believe that the issue in the economy hasn’t got to do with minimum wage. I have always also reminded my colleagues that the minimum wage was not imposed, it was negotiated and state governments agreed to it, the president signed it not under duress, there was no strike to compel the then president to sign it, he signed it voluntarily.”

    “I believe when you look at the minimum wage, as it is today at N18,000, it is less than 100 dollars. I think it is now about eighty dollars. Now, divide eighty dollars by 31 days, you will be getting about two point something dollars. Now we cannot argue that workers in Nigeria formal sector should not earn more than two dollars a day, I cannot subscribe to that because the heart of governance is the welfare of the people.”

    Expectedly, the NLC President, Ayuba Wabba who was furious about the claim by the governors gave an indication that the workers will shut down the states if the governors attempt to reduce workers salaries, arguing that the N18,000 which the governors are claiming they cannot pay, is not enough to take the Nigerian worker home at the end of every month.

    He said “we reject in its entirety, Nigerian workers will not take it lightly. We are not the problem, rather we are the solution. The problem is that they have not been able to reduce the cost of governance. They should go and reduce their security votes. Let them also cut down on the number of their entourages. They must also be accountable to the citizens that voted them into power. “We are going to resist any attempt to tamper with the payment under any guise. Let them also note that the N18,000 was not allocated, it was negotiated through a tripartite process and it is a product of law that is even due for review. We are going to champion the review. Let us also put them on notice, if attempt is made to reduce, review or do anything outside the legal minimum of N18,000, which cannot even take us home, we are going to resist it. Nigerian workers will be mobilise to resist.”

    His counterpart at the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria, Boboi Kaigama also shared the same sentiments.

    Like Oshiomhole, Kaigama explained that the N18,000 minimum wage was agreed at a tripartite meeting involving government at all levels, employers through Nigeria’s Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) and the organised labour.

    According to the TUC President, “We are not only disappointed but also we fear for our future as responsible citizens of the country because we are daily confronted with policy summersaults as development strategies. To start with, we had thought that the very essence of setting up the Governors’ Forum is for them to meet once in awhile to discuss vital issues on how to move the country forward little did we know that we are absolutely wrong. “For issues like reduction of national minimum wage and sack of workers to be discussed at what is supposed to be a high profile meeting sends a wrong signal. We are disappointed that governors who preached love, peace and progress for all few months ago are now singing in a different tune. They have suddenly realised they can no longer pay $90 a month, which suggests to us that they are asking for a merger. How can they not pay N18, 000 but they can have a 10- car convoy, six for wife, pay themselves ridiculous pension and severance pay, have houses in Abuja, Lagos, Dubai, London, USA; send their children to primary schools in London and stash millions of pounds in their mansions. This is heartless and barbaric! We are disappointed because we had expected the Governors’ Forum to be angling about true fiscal federalism and how to harness the resources nature has bequeathed to every state. We have always made it known that the cost of governance is high, especially as every state depends on federal government’s monthly allocation. Why should the innocent pay for the looting and stealing of our leaders. If they cut down salaries, how do they want business to flourish when the purchasing power is already very low? It appears all the hype on “anti -corruption” is hereby laid to rest, as workers must now steal to survive.”

    One would have thought that the governors will think out of the box to explore the possibility of increasing Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) through exploration of resources, albeit abundant ones in their vicinity to improve their state resources.

    The governors announced at the end of their meeting under the auspices of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum that due to the state of the economy, they were no longer in a position to pay the minimum wage to their workers.

    Reacting to the claims by the governors, a nongovernmental organisation, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), accuse the governors of trying to increase the unemployment and poverty level in the country.

    The group’s Chairman, Debo Adeniran believes that such an action will result in large scale corruption in the public sector and lead to an increase in crime.

    He said the state governors should as a matter of priority, declare economic emergency in their states in order to remove unnecessary and irrelevant projects affecting wages in their respective states and not use the state of the nation’s economy as an excuse for reducing the minimum wage or downsizing their workforce.

    He said further that “even with the N18, 000 minimum wage, the salary of most average Nigerian workers cannot satisfy their immediate needs and which should not be so.”

    The states should also look inwards and find ways to harness the abundant human and natural resources that every state is blessed with. They should also endeavour to cut down on basic running costs and put a check on corruption and other practices that impact of their finance. It has often been said that the dependent on oil revenue is inimical to the economic growth of the country. Non-oil sectors of the economy should be harnessed.”

    Ango Abdullahi, a Professor of Agriculture and former Presidential Adviser on food Security believe that governors who cannot pay the minimum wage owe Nigerian workers an apology.

    While describing the claims as irresponsible, insensitive, embarrassing and unacceptable to Nigerians given the huge amount they and their retinue of aides pocket monthly, the former Ahmadu Bello University Vice Chancellor was quoted as saying that it was a thing of displeasure that governors, who were taking billions of Naira monthly under the guise of security votes, which they don’t account for, could wickedly refuse to pay their workers a worthless minimum wage of N18,000 monthly.

    Findings revealed that during the negotiation for the current minimum wage, some of the state governors had offered to pay far more than the N18,000 while others offered far less.

    It was learnt that Abia State under Theodore Orji  for example offered to pay N46,700, Kebbi State under Saidu Dankigari proposed  to pay N30,000, Imo state under Governor Ikedi Ohakim proposed N30,000 and Kwara state under Senator Bukola Saraki now Senate President proposed to pay N30,000.

    Also, Bauchi State under Isa Yuguda accepted to pay N16,585.50, the Federal Capital Territory proposed N25,000, Zamfara proposed to pay N15,000, Jigawa proposed to pay N20,800, Plateau proposed to pay N10,000, Anambra  N25,000 while Ebonyi proposed to pay N10,000. Akwa Ibom State proposed to pay N13,333.12 and  Kano State N11,022.17. This, however was before the tripartite committee agreed on N18,000 as the national minimum wage.

    Analysts believe that the over dependent on oil revenue and massive corruption in the system is affecting the ability of the states to pay living wages to workers. Investigations revealed that many of the states cannot generate enough revenue to augment what they receive from the federations account.

    At the recently concluded 21st Nigeria Economic Summit, participants agreed on the need to look inward and improve on their internal revenue, while blocking leakages in the system.

  • Minimum wage: NLC accuses governors of declaring war on workers

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said on Sunday that governors of the 36 states of the federation under the auspices of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum have declared war on Nigerian workers by saying they were no longer in a position to pay the N18,000 minimum wage.

    In a statement signed by its President, Comrade Ayuba Wabba, the NLC said the declaration by the governors was an attempt to frustrate efforts by organized labour to table a proposal for a review of the current minimum wage which was signed in 2011.

    The NLC said it was prepared to fight any attempt to frustrate improved workers’ welfare in the country, saying organized labour was ready to do battle to raise the living standard of Nigerian workers.

    The congress said: “The Nigeria Labour Congress is shocked by the statement credited to the Chairman of the Governors’ Forum, Governor Abdulaziz Yari, that the N18,000 National Minimum Wage promulgated into law in 2011 was no longer sustainable because of the fall in the price of crude oil.

    “The governor who was speaking on behalf of his colleagues at the end of a meeting of the Forum also claimed that the National Minimum Wage was imposed.

    “We wish to make it abundantly clear that this attempt to reverse the National Minimum Wage is a declaration of war against the working people of this country, and we would have no alternative than to mobilize to respond to this act of aggression by the political class on our welfare.

    “For the records, the 2011 National Minimum Wage came into existence after almost two years of agitation and eventual negotiation by the tripartite committee of government (represented by both the federal and state governments), the Nigeria Employers Consultative Association representing other employers (in the private sector) and organized Labour.

    “This is in the best tradition of tripartite negotiation recognized and codified by the International Labour Organization. As organized Labour, we submitted a request for N52,000 and provided justification for it as the minimum wage which a worker and his recognized legal dependents needs to live a healthy life over 30 – 31 days in a month.”

     

  • Okorocha admits Ambode into Governors’ Forum

    Imo State Governor and Chair of the Progressives Governors Forum Owelle Rochas Okorocha has admitted the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, into the forum.

    Okorocha, who spoke yesterday at a town hall meeting in Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State, said he was acting prophetically.

    The governor said he was sure of Ambode’s victory as the people of Lagos have accepted him.

    He said: “Ambode, a man with a record of excellent performance, served for 27 years in Lagos as auditor general of local governments and accountant-general.

    “The APC candidate is the best thing to happen to Lagos. He possesses the experience to take Lagos to the next level.

    “I urge all the Igbo in Lagos to vote for this man of destiny who God has prepared for this season. Your lot will only be better under an APC-led government in Lagos. You must not sell your mandate for a mess of pottage.”

    Okorocha presented Ambode and his running mate, Dr. Oluranti Adegbule, to the people.

    The APC candidate thanked the governor and the people at the meeting,  promising to complete 25 roads in all the local governments.

    He assured Lagosians of accelerated development, recalling his experience in the civil service.

    “My civil service career has made me conversant with the workings of government.

    “My well thought-out and robust programme of action would definitely take Lagos to the next level. Governance is a continuum and it takes a person with skill and competence not to lose the momentum or even derail the train of progress.”

  • The trouble with governors’ forum

    SIR: The crisis within the so-called Nigeria Governors’ Forum has not only caused unimaginable embarrassment to the Nigerian people but has also unwittingly brought terrible shame to the country. It is no gainsaying that the nation is presently confronted with monumental security, socio-economic and political problems hence it is incumbent on the political leaders in the country to take a decisive action with a view to finding immediate and lasting solutions to the seemingly intractable problems facing the nation. Certainly, the present situation in the country calls for undiluted spirit of patriotism and commitment on the part of our political leaders to enable them ameliorate the terrible sufferings of our people and as such, there should be no room for our governors to engage themselves in unnecessary and unproductive ventures or jamboree.

    The present situation whereby the governors constitute themselves into various irrelevant associations such as the Northern States Governors’ Forum (NSGF), the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) and most recently the P.D.P Governors’ Forum (P.D.P.G.F.) and always junketing to Abuja for meetings which could only be described as a mere jamboree, thereby abandoning their state official duties is totally unnecessary and complete waste of public fund. Such regular meetings do not serve any useful purpose to their people in view of the abject poverty prevalent in the country. The Nigerian constitution did not provide for the Nigeria Governors’ Forum or any such forums for that matter. The only body known to the constitution is the National Council of State which is comprised of the President together with the governors of the 36 states and other top government functionaries.

    The bickering among the governors on irrelevant issues such as the election of the chairman of the governors’ forum in the face of the multifarious problems currently confronting the nation is certainly the height of gross insensitivity on their part. The ugly scene on the nation’s television whereby their “Excellencies” were seen quarrelling over the conduct of the election of their chairman is appalling and totally in bad taste. The incident cast serious aspersions on the image and reputation of the governors usually addressed as “Excellencies.” The unbecoming behaviour calls to question as to whether they still deserve to be addressed as excellencies in view of that unfortunate incident during the controversial election of the chairman of their forum.

    In the light of the foregoing therefore, I hereby call on the various state Houses of Assembly to prevail on their governors to withdraw immediately from the various unproductive forums by urgently passing resolutions to that effect so as to avoid future wastage of tax payers’ money. The public fund used for the regular Abuja jamboree by the governors could better be channeled to more meaningful projects that would definitely impact positively on the lives of the downtrodden masses of the country.

    • Nze Nwabueze Akabogu (JP)

    Enugwu-Ukwu,

    Anambra State.

  • Governors’ Forum hails Ekiti, Anambra for completing Peer Review

    Ekiti and Anambra states are the only two states that have completed the Peer Review Exercise, the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) has said.

    Its Director-General, Mr Bayo Okauru, spoke at the ongoing Second Nigeria Governors’ Forum (Southwest) Governance Share Fair at the Hotel Bellissimo, Lekki, Lagos.

    He said the Governance Share Fair will create the right atmosphere for peer learning among states by enabling them to share good practices, showcase reform and achievements as well as develop areas of collaboration and further networking.

    The NGF chief noted that the forum has become more focused on priorities that reduce poverty, enhance development and create better connection between government and the citizenry.

    The six governors in the Southwest, who were represented at the event, delivered goodwill messages in which they recognised the need for the region to share information among one another to synergise development and deliver good governance to the people.

    Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi, who was represented by the Commissioner for Integration and Intergovernmental Affairs, Mr Funminiyi Afuye, said the forum will afford the States to learn what is working in service delivery and good governance which will be beneficial to individual states.

    According to him, there is need for regional integration and an exchange of ideas to foster integration at a higher level.

    Also, Ekiti State Commissioner for Information and Civic Orientation Mr Tayo Ekundayo said the state completed the review exercise following the achievements of the Fayemi administration in several areas.

    In a lecture, entitled: Governance Matters, the National Programme Manager of the State Partnership for Accountability, Responsiveness and Capability (SPARC), Mr Joe Abbah noted that good governance cannot be guaranteed where corruption thrives.

    He said good governance will result in poverty reduction, equitable economic growth, reduction in unemployment and improvement in human capital, health, education and infrastructure.

    The Southwest Regional Coordinator of DFID, Dr Sina Fagbenro-Byron, reiterated the efforts of the global agency in reducing poverty, corruption and delivering good governance in the Southwest.

    He urged the states in the region to team up and ensure regional integration that will lead to multidimensional achievements and delivery of vibrant and robust governance.

    Representatives of the six states made presentations on their achievements in different sectors with a view to sharing information that would be beneficial to one another.

  • Why there is crisis in Governors’ Forum, by Dickson

    Why there is crisis in Governors’ Forum, by Dickson

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson at the weekend spoke on the crisis rocking the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF), saying that certain members have converted it into a manipulative trade union.

    He also said that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has the right to form its governors’ forum, stressing that it is in tune with democracy.

    Dickson opposed moves by certain elements in the ruling party to adorn the cap of internal opposition leaders, urging them to either imbibe party discipline or move out. The governor also said the highest office in the land deserved the respect of the party members and Nigerians.

    Dickson spoke with reporters in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, on the activities of his administration, the PDP crisis and the friction in the Governors’ Forum.

    He said: “The Governors’ Forum is primarily a mechanism for peer review of governors who are equal. You don’t need to be a member of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum to be a governor. It is just like your association, the NUJ. It is just a platform for peer review. It is a platform for collaborating with the Federal Government on the critical issues of development, national security and other challenges that come up.

    “The Governors’ Forum is not and should not be a platform for the control of the national politics. As governors, we are not elected to run the country. We are governors elected to manage our states. The Governors’ Forum cannot be allowed to go on as a trade union. What is happening is that people are taking the advantage of the developments and discontent in the system, to manipulate it to suit their individual whims and caprices. But what is wrong is wrong.

    ‘Look at the United States Governors’ Forum, which we copied, you don’t see the Governors’ Forum there telling President Barack Obama what he should do and what he should not. We are provincial players because our mandate is to lead our states, not to run the federation. Those who have the mandate to run the federation are the President, the Vice President, the elected members of the National Assembly, the political leadership of the various parties. Those are the people that have the platform to do that”.

    Dickson said, if certain issues are agitating the minds of the governors, they can use some formal and informal avenues, including the National Economic Council to ventilate their views and grievances, instead of using the NGF to play politics.

    He pointed out that the past PDP governors who chaired the NGF attempted to use the platform to play national politics. The governor justified the formation of the PDP Governors’ Forum, saying that it is necessary.

    Urging the PDP members to imbibe party discipline, he said: “If you are in a party, you must play according to the rules of the party or get out”.

    Dickson said any PDP member who is not useful to the ruling party may not be useful to another party, if he defects from the PDP.

    He said the seasoned and experienced opposition leaders would always separate the wheat from the chaff, adding that they can easily isolate defectors whose ideas and principles tally with their own from political charlatans.

    The governor reviewed the reforms embarked upon by his administration, pointing out that the anti-ghost workers war has started yielding dividends. Dickson said that the monthly wage bill of N6.8b has come down to N3.8b.

  • Governors Forum: Why Jonathan is mistaken

    Governors Forum: Why Jonathan is mistaken

    When the dust finally settles on the on going face off between President Goodluck Jonathan and Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s led Nigeria Governors Forum, the wind would have blown and the fowl’s backside would have been revealed.

    If you don’t know what I am talking about then ask your neighbour as you are probably the only one around still in the dark about how the president’s rabid ambition to run a second term is tearing apart almost every known political structure and power blocs in the country including the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Jonathan in case you don’t know is hell bent on running for the presidency again in 2015 and an Abuja court last week cleared the way for him to do so if he so desires, and there is no denying that’s exactly what the man wants. And there is nothing wrong in that if his party believes so much in his ability to win the next presidential election and hands him the PDP ticket. But he will still need to contend with the opposition, now growing in strength and confidence, and the electorate who are more than disappointed with his performance.

    But the man doesn’t seem to care about what the electorate think of him and his administration, all that matters to him is winning the PDP’s ticket by hook or crook and once again rigging his way to the presidency, and he appears to be well on the way to achieving that. Rightly or wrongly, he has identified the seeming obstacles to achieving this and has set about destroying them, but how far he can go remains to be seen.

    The first major obstacle it seems is the PDP and the man has succeeded, or so it seems, in hijacking the party’s leadership with the party’s National Working Committee (NWC) and the Board of Trustees (BoT) firmly in his pocket and gunning for the soul of its National Executive Committee (NEC), the highest decision making body in the party. NEC comprises of all the national leaders of the party including the powerful state governors and their chairmen. And he seems to be facing difficulty here.

    While he has pocketed Bamanga Tukur’s NWC with the sacking via the court of former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s men, and succeeded in installing his Yes man, Tony Aninih as BoT chairman, getting the PDP governors and their state chairmen on his side has been an uphill task, and this is where Rotimi Amaechi and the Nigeria Governors Forum come in.

    For lack of understanding of what the NGF is really is or absolute ignorance or both, President Goodluck Jonathan believes Governor Amaechi should be able to goad the NGF to do his (Jonathan’s) bidding, irrespective of the feelings of other governors, simply because Amaechi, as Governor of Rivers State is from the same south/south geopolitical zone as Jonathan, in essence, a paddy-paddy affair. Rubbish.

    Those who know Governor Amaechi very well would tell you the man is made of better stuff. He would not do a thing unless he is convinced it is in the best interest of the people, your closeness to him or otherwise notwithstanding. Moreover, leading a team of equals as the NGF is, Amaechi knows that he has to say and do what his brother governors want lest he loses their confidence and gets thrown out.

    Blaming Amaechi or trying to punish him for the president’s inability to get the governors behind his second term project is missing the point. Jonathan’s failure to rally the governors behind him is down to his lack lustre performance as President and Commander In Chief and has got nothing to do with Amaechi’s alleged refusal or reluctance to back him. And as just been revealed by the governor of Niger State, Dr. Babangida Aliyu, Jonathan refusal or failure to honour the agreement he made with PDP governors in the run up to the last presidential election to serve just one term, is also at the root of his problems with the governors. So, bringing Amaechi into the picture is akin to hiding behind one finger.

    The NGF as we have been made to believe and as shown by the utterances of its members is just a club of state governors and a forum for them to rub minds on issues of mutual interest. More often than not the Forum had been criticized for being too selfish, but that was exactly what it was supposed to do; selfish on the side of the states. And no state or state governor has come out to deny or back off what the Forum has been doing.

    Because more often than not the issues that cut across the states’ interests have been against or in sharp contrast to Federal Government’s position, the governors are seen as being antagonistic to not just the federal government but also President Goodluck Jonathan, and because Governor Amaechi as their leader often speaks for them and rightly so, he is erroneously perceived as an enemy of President Jonathan. This is wrong. Amaechi as those who know him well will say is a man of strong character who will never let his people down, hence he continues to enjoy their support and confidence. He may disagree with them and make his point or position known to them, but once a decision was taken and he was part of it, as the leader, he is bound by it and he goes out to vent and defend it. So, if speaking the minds of the governors is his offence, then all the governors are guilty.

    But is it not even stupid and unrealistic for the President and his men to think Governor Amaechi could swing the minds of all the 36 state governors from six different parties when the issues that bring them together are as diverse as Nigeria? I am sure the governors will be united and probably think one way as long as the issues at hand concern them equally, as we have seen with the issue of sovereign wealth fund, excess crude revenue and local government autonomy. When the Forum attempted to speak with one voice on the issue of state police we all saw what happened.

    But I am sure if the issue of a second term for Jonathan were to come up for discussion whether within the newly formed PDP Governors Forum or the more respected Nigeria Governors Forum today, the answer would be NO. So, Jonathan, Amaechi is not your problem neither is it the NGF. Look at the mirror and you’ll see your problem

    It is convenient for the federal government and the PDP to see the NGF as a trade union or pressure group that must be destroyed now simply because they can’t have their way with the governors. When the Forum intervened in the face off between Labour and Government to save the neck of the president and also sided with Federal government on fuel subsidy removal, it was a good body and Amaechi a good boy. But now that they can not pocket the group, NGF is a trade union and Amaechi an enemy. Ehn Mr. President? Time will tell whether what you are doing now is right or wrong but Nigerians surely know who their leaders are. They know who to trust and they will deliver their verdict at the right time. Chikena.

  • Governors to give special attention to polio eradication

    Governors to give special attention to polio eradication

    The Nigeria Governors Forum has affirmed its solidarity with the governors and people of Borno, Yobe and Kano States in their resolve to continue with the polio eradication programmes.

    The NGF Chairman and Governor of Rivers, Mr. Chibuike Amaechi, stated this at the end of the forum`s meeting on Thursday in Abuja.

    According to him, the forum expresses deep concern and condemns the recent killing of health workers in the three states.

    The News Agency of Nigeria says the forum had earlier resolved to institute a monthly polio campaign to be headed by state governors in a bid to promote routine immunisation and healthy environment in the 36 states.

    Accordingly, the governors resolved to meet with the Presidential Task Force on Polio Eradication to identify funding gaps and challenges against polio eradication in the country.

    Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo, who also spoke to journalists at the end of the meeting, said the issue of polio was becoming embarrassing to the nation.

    According to Okorocha, Nigerians who are travelling to Saudi Arabia in particularly are now being subjected to some kind of disinfectants.

    In a communique issued at the end of the meeting, the governors resolved to ensure that all organs of the forum would be made functional at the next meeting.

    The forum also resolved to fill some key positions in the forum and make them functional to enhance its activities.