Tag: labour

  • Steer clear of our affairs, Labour Party tells NLC

    Steer clear of our affairs, Labour Party tells NLC

     The Labour Party (LP) has urged Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to stop interfering in its affairs as directed by the Registrar of Trade Unions in Nigeria, Mr Falonipe Amos.

    Mr Obiora Ifoh, National Publicity Secretary, LP said this in a statement on Tuesday in Abuja.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the NLC has been in contention with the leadership of the Labour Party over proprietary rights claims, insisting that it owns the party.

    The registrar’s intervention was sequel to a letter to the office by LP National Chairman, Mr Julius Abure dated July 10, 2024.

    The letter was entitled: Request for Your Urgent Intervention the Need to Define the Roles of NLC.

    He quoted Amos as saying that the Act establishing the NLC does not permit it to interfere in the political activities of any political party.

    Read Also: Organised Labour hails Abiodun on deductions

    Amos referred NLC to Section 15 (1) (2) (3) of the Trade Unions Act ‘Cap T14 & TI5 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004.

    It provides that:  “On no account should NLC be involved in the running or patronising political parties or persons into elective office.’’

    He said Section 15 (1) of the Trade Union Act specifically states that it is illegal for NLC or any other trade union to use monies generated by its members to the furtherance of any political objective.

    “The following objectives, and no others, are political objective for the purpose of this section, that is to say “the making of contribution towards the funds of any political party’’, it said.

    It also bars NLC from the Payment of any expenses incurred, directly or indirectly by a candidate of prospective candidate for election to any political office in Nigeria or any part of Nigeria, among other provisions.

    “I wish to urge the leadership of NLC to be guided by the above provisions of the Trade Unions Act in dealing with Labour Party and any other political parties”, Ifoh quoted the registrar as saying. (NAN)

  • MAY-I commends Labour, Tinubu, Nigerians for new Minimum Wage law

    MAY-I commends Labour, Tinubu, Nigerians for new Minimum Wage law

    Motivating African Youths Initiative, led by founder Dr Ogenna Walter Ekwubiri, has congratulated the Federal Government, Labour and the Nigerian workforce on the  new minimum wage. 

    Ekwubiri hailed Nigerians in a  statement on Wednesday, July 24, in Abuja.

    According to her, this significant step is a testament to the collective efforts towards improving the living standards of Nigerians.

    She stated that while this achievement is commendable, there remain pressing challenges affecting Nigerian youths. 

    She listed high unemployment rates, limited access to quality education, and inadequate support for entrepreneurship stifle their potential. 

    Read Also: Fed Govt resumes trial of 300 terrorism suspects

    To address these issues, the government, Ekwubiri advised Tinubu’s government to: “Enhance Educational Opportunities: By investing in vocational training and digital skills programs, we can equip youths with the tools needed for the modern job market.

    “Support Entrepreneurship: Providing grants and mentorship programs can encourage innovation and self-reliance among young entrepreneurs.

    “Strengthen Job Creation Initiatives: Collaborating with private sectors to create sustainable employment opportunities will reduce the unemployment rate and increase productivity.”

    She expressed commitment  to advocating for the socio-economic empowerment of women and youths across Africa.

  • Minimum Wage: Joint unions to shutdown state that fails to pay – Labour

    Minimum Wage: Joint unions to shutdown state that fails to pay – Labour

    Mr Christopher Arapasopo, Chairman, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Osun Chapter, says joint labour unions have agreed to enforce the new N70,000 minimum wage in all the states and any state that fails to pay will be shutdown.

    Arapasopo, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday in Osogbo, said that said the unions agreed on the new minimum wage as  sacrifice to prevent hike fuel pump price.

    He said that during its NEC meeting,  all members agreed that they would enforce the minimum wage in all the states and that any state that failed to pay would be shutdown.

    “The governors would never say they were not there when it was agreed. In fact, they were the ones agitating for N70,000 as the minimum wage.

    “We, as labour, suggested N250,000 and they brought it down to N62, 000 before shifting ground to N70,000, and we accepted it. we have sacrificed a lot of things.

    “So, for any government or governor that fails to pay, we will shut that state down. It is a must for them to pay. It is a no go area. We are not negotiating that”, Osun NLC chair said.

    According to him, we had our NEC meeting which we just concluded some hours ago, where all the state representatives adopted the amount that was announced, based on some facts.

    “The President said if we insisted on our demand of N250, 000, he would have to increase the fuel price.

    ” But as good citizens of Nigeria, we believe the demand should not be only to the benefit of a particular sector alone.

    “As workers, we should be able to think about other Nigerians and not ourselves alone.

    “So, we made the sacrifice to accept the N70,000 to avoid the price of fuel going up.” he said

    Arapasopo said If the union had insisted on the N250,000 minimum wage,  Nigerians and workers would suffer the increment in fuel pump price and inflation would increase.

    Read Also: Fed Govt, Labour, OPS okay N70,000 as  minimum wage

    He said the N70,000 accepted by labour was still fair as it would be the least salary paid to workers in the lowest cadre.

    Arapasopo added that consequential adjustments and benefits attached to the levels would even jack up the wage when it was implemented.

    He said the Osun chapter of the union would meet with the state government to discuss some allowances for workers, “but the minimum wage stands non-negotiable”.

    (NAN)

  • BREAKING: Why we accepted N70,000 minimum wage – Labour

    BREAKING: Why we accepted N70,000 minimum wage – Labour

    The leaders of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and Trade Union Congress (TUC) announced that they have accepted the N70,000 minimum wage approved for Nigerian workers by President Bola Tinubu.

    A statement by Bayo Onanuga, the Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Information and Strategy, indicated that President Tinubu also pledged to find ways to help the private sector and sub-national entities meet the minimum wage requirement.

    Following the meeting, the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero, briefed the media and confirmed that the unions had accepted the offer.

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    Ajaero, accompanied by Comrade Festus Usifo, President of the Trade Union Congress (TUC), and other representatives of Nigerian workers, stated that the unions had accepted the offer because there were other incentives attached.

    He said that the president’s pledge of a review every three years, as opposed to what had previously been received, was another factor in his decision to accept the offer.

    Details shortly…

  • Minimum Wage: Tinubu’s meeting with Labour ends, resumes next week

    Minimum Wage: Tinubu’s meeting with Labour ends, resumes next week

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s meeting with organized Labour on Thursday, July 11, concluded without any new developments regarding the national minimum wage.

    Previously, the government and the organized private sector had agreed on a N62,000 wage, while organized Labour insisted on a minimum of N250,000.

    A new meeting between President Tinubu and organized Labour is scheduled for next week to continue discussions on the national minimum wage.

    Labour representatives indicated that the one-week break will allow them to reflect on the issues raised during Thursday’s discussions.

    Speaking to reporters at the end of the meeting, Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Nkeiruka Onyejeocha; President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, and his Trade Union Congress (TUC) counterpart, Festus Usifoh, affirmed that the meeting did not discuss anything in terms of naira and kobo.

    The minister noted that President Tinubu only had a discussion with the leadership of organized labour as a father to children but expressed the hope that a solution will soon be found to the minimum wage issue.

    “It was a meeting between father and children and… I think we are hopeful that very soon everything will be resolved. When father and children talk, you know what it is. That’s just exactly what has happened and it took us almost like an hour, and I believe that it’s all for good”, she said.

    Speaking to journalists after the meeting, President of the NLC, Comrade Ajaero said that there was nothing like negotiation at the meeting but rather a discussion on the current economic realities in the country.

    According to him, “In a real sense, it wasn’t a negotiation but a discussion and we have had that discussion. We agreed to look at the real terms probably and reconvene in the next one week.

    “So that’s where we are because we didn’t go down there to talk naira and kobo. At least there were some basic issues that we agreed on”, he said.

    Asked whether the organized labour insisted on the N250,000 demand at the meeting, the NLC President said: “I remember mentioning that we didn’t go into Naria and Kobo discussion. Now the status quo in terms of the amount N250,000 and N62,000 remains until we finish this conversation.”

    Also speaking, the President of TUC, Osifo, said that the organized Labour put all the economic indices on the table and how it was biting on Nigerians.

    “In the meeting, we tried to put the issues on the table. Issues that are bordering and biting Nigerians today, are the economic difficulties and the value of naira, how it has also eroded, and how these have affected the prices of commodities and goods in the market.

    “So, we tried to put these before Mr President because he is the President of the country and the bulk stops at his table. 

    “We have had all the conversations with all his agents, but today (Thursday) we said let us meet with the father of the country and have this conversation and make the argument that Labour always makes.

    “We made all the arguments, the economic analysis, macro, micro, fiscal and monetary issues. So, we put everything forward and at the end, the President made his remark as the President and we all agreed let’s go back to internalize it, have some conversations and by one week time, we will come back and we will continue the meeting”, he said.

    Speaking in an interview, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, expressed optimism that there would be a positive result after next week’s meeting.

    “Recall that already there is 62,000 naira that has been put out there from the government side and the organized private sector but the organized labour is still not accepting that but we know that they will come to the table, we know that this is something that is going to be workable for Nigerians.

    “The organized labour and the government will reach an agreement. We have adjourned now for a week. The labour union has asked the government to allow them At least a week to discuss this further and we have allowed them. We’re going to reconvene in the next one week and we hope and we believe by the end of the day, we’ll have something good for all Nigerians.

    “We do hope that by the time we come together again next week, we’ll have something that we can put out for Nigerians to see and to agree with.”

    However, a source privy to the meeting said that the President urged the organized labour to consider the N62,000 offer the federal government and the organized private sector made.

    Read Also: Labour seeks return to old pension scheme

    According to the source, President Tinubu narrated what led to the subsidy removal and how Nigeria was feeding her neighbours and was suffering.

    The source said: “President Tinubu suggested that instead of waiting for five years to review the minimum wage, we can continue to dialogue and see the possibility of reviewing it every two years.

    “He also said that the Organized Labour should consider the N62,000 offer because it is double of the N30,000 we were paying.”

    The source who spoke on the condition of anonymity said that when the NLC President reminded Tinubu that it would amount to wage reduction if the organized labour accepts N62,000 as the least paid worker currently goes home with N72,000 (including wage award and 40% increase), he (President Tinubu) was just laughing.

  • Labour seeks return to old pension scheme

    Labour seeks return to old pension scheme

    The President, Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero yesterday, called for a return to the old pension scheme regime, saying the current regime falls short of the fundamental purpose it was set up to address.

    He spoke at the 2024 National Pre-retirement Summit with: “Challenges, Strategies, Prospects and Opportunities at Retirement in Nigeria” as theme.

    The programme was organised by XEM, a global opportunity and capacity development hub in Africa.

    Read Also: Alleged N1.6bn fraud: Ex-AGF, co-defendants seek adjournment to refund funds

    Ajaero stressed that retirement ought not to be a death sentence but something every worker should be looking forward to.

    He said currently, the Federal Government is alleged to owe nearly N260 billion in pension arrears, with federal parastatals accounting for an additional N40 billion.

    He said many workers have fear about what would become of them after retirement because it does not offer security.

  • Exit poll projects Labour landslide in UK election

    Exit poll projects Labour landslide in UK election

    Britain is facing the reality of a massive Labour majority today with Keir Starmer projected for an election rout.

    Moments after ballot stations closed at 10pm, the dramatic exit poll was released – showing Sir Keir winning 410 of the 650 seats. That would be a majority of 170 – just short of the 179 achieved by Tony Blair.

    The Tories are expected to be slashed from the 365 secured less than five years ago to just 131 – their worst performance in modern political history.

    The Liberal Democrats could get 61 – and Nigel Farage’s Reform insurgents are predicted to have 13 after effectively leeching millions of votes from the Conservatives. The SNP would be slashed to 10, meaning they would no longer be the biggest party in Scotland.

    Although the exit survey, run for broadcasters by polling guru Sir John Curtice, is not guaranteed to be exact, it has accurately reflected the outcome in the past few elections.

    Sir Keir gave a muted reaction to the bombshell, posting on social media: ‘To everyone who has campaigned for Labour in this election, to everyone who voted for us and put their trust in our changed Labour Party – thank you.’

    But his allies were far less restrained, with Lord Mandelson gloating that he was ‘gobsmacked’ and an ‘electoral meteor’ had ‘struck planet Earth’. He said it would have required a ‘superman’ to save the Tories and Rishi Sunak ‘is not superman’.

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    Deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner – who could be set to become deputy PM within hours – said the numbers were ‘encouraging’ and praised Sir Keir’s leadership.

    Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting was in tears as he was told the figures on live TV.

    Less than an hour before the exit poll dropped, Downing Street released a dissolution honours list – sending seven Tories and eight Labour politicians to the Lords. They include Theresa May, Rishi Sunak’s chief aide Liam Booth-Smith, Chris Grayling and former 1922 committee chair Graham Brady.

    Harriet Harman and Margaret Beckett are among those on the Labour list – despite Sir Keir having committed to abolishing the Upper House.

  • Minimum wage: Labour begs Tinubu to approve N250,000 demand

    Minimum wage: Labour begs Tinubu to approve N250,000 demand

    Organised Labour has appealed to President Bola Tinubu to show his compassion for Nigerian workers by approving their demand for a minimum wage of N250,000, to reflect the nation’s current inflationary trend.

    The president-general of the Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) and a member of the organized labour negotiation team in the Tripartite Committee for the New National Minimum Wage, Prince Adewale Adeyanju, criticized state governors for obstructing efforts to secure a fair wage for government employees.

    He said: “If you are an employer of labour and you do not have a love of your workers in your heart, how do you call yourself an employer of labour? We have problems with OPS and the state governors who believe they cannot afford to pay N30,000 let alone the figure the labour is demanding.

    ”We started having that issue at the negotiating table where they were dragging from N30,000 to N48,000 and N60,000. They were priced as if they were tomatoes and onions before they now finally came out and said N62,000.

    ”Even before they arrived at N62, 000 the Organised Labour was still coming down so that we could be on the same page. Yes, the country is not smiling.

    “We all know what the harsh economic situation is and the workers have not been happy with the economic downturn. At the close of negotiations, we had two position papers; one from the government and OPS sides that recommended N62,000 and N250,000 from the Labour side which includes TUC and NLC.

    “The ball now lies on the table of Mr President who I believe that this is an opportunity to show empathy to the whole workers. This minimum wage comes every five years. Between now and five years, what is going to be the impact of the figure of a new minimum wage on the lives of the workers in their various workplaces?

    Read Also: Labour would make UK ‘illegal migration capital of world’, says Sunak

    ”That is why we are appealing to him as a friend of workers who persistently promised to give workers a living wage to approve the N250,000. Nothing stops him from approving it, but we heard that he said he would only approve what is what the economy can afford.

    He added: “As organised labour, we all are citizens of this country and we know the economy can afford our demand. We plead that he should not listen to those greedy governors who want to pay slave wages to continue to maintain their outrageous and ostentatious lifestyle.

    ”The security vote they are getting is enough to pay that minimum wage. What are they doing with their security votes? Which security are they providing to the citizens? Some of the governors, the likes of Edo State, have been paying 70,000.”

  • Foreign Affairs Perm Sec favoured certain staff, neglected others – Labour union

    Foreign Affairs Perm Sec favoured certain staff, neglected others – Labour union

    The Joint Negotiating Council (JNC) in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has accused embattled Permanent Secretary, Ibrahim Lamuwa, of high-handedness and maladministration.

    The labour union alleged that Lamuwa was involved in financial improprieties and at several times displayed favouritism, which significantly affected the welfare and rights of workers.

    In a petition dated June 11, 2024 to the Minister, Yusuf Tuggar, the JNC said Lamuwa relegated issues concerning staff well-being, allowances, emoluments and training.

    The union listed the benefits that workers have been denied and accused the senior government official of favouring a certain category of people while abandoning and victimising others.

    The JNC lamented the delay in promotion and conversion of staff, lack of transparency in postings, delay in payment of clothing allowance, discrimination in First 28 days allowance payment, lack of fairness in the distribution of 2024 Hajj seats.

    Others are inadequate posting of Batch B officers to foreign missions, poor sanitation and hygiene due to insufficient water supply, lack of work tools, dilapidated office buildings and refusal to pay the 25th Regular Course allowance for nine months.

    The petition obtained by PRNigeria – signed by JNC Chairman, Comrade Ali Seidu and Assistant General Secretary, Comrade S. E. Akpana – urged the Minister to look into their grievances and ensure justice is done.

    It reads in part: “Consequent upon the maladministration and dwindling level of productivity occasioned by administrative leadership apathy in the Ministry, the JNC has been engaging with the management thinking its solidarity will yield positive results and prompt action on pending issues.

    “Unfortunately, there was no improvement. Instead, the management has become worse, unreceptive, and very harsh to everyone who dares to speak and ask questions. Victimisation, intimidation, and harassment have become tools the management use to shut critics while the staff continue to suffer.

    “The staff of the Ministry are outraged by the egregious neglect, surreptitious administrative skullduggery, manipulations and commercialisation of the Ministry’s activities by the Permanent Secretary and his allies under the guise of rejuvenation.

    Read Also: No figure sacrosanct for minimum wage – Labour

    “They have introduced harmful practices that threaten the fabric of our institution. We demand an immediate end to their destructive policies and a return to the principles of fairness, equity, and transparency. We call on the Minister to direct the authorities to investigate these grievances and take a swift action.

    “We the staff hereby give a 21-day ultimatum to the management to immediately address the grievances outlined in our communiqué. Failure to do so will be met with strong resistance,” the union leaders warned. 

    The Permanent Secretary is facing allegations of sexual harassment levelled against him by Mrs. Simisola Fajemirokun-Ajayi, an aide to the Foreign Affairs Minister.

    The Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs. Folasade Yemi-Esan has set up a panel to investigate the accusations and suspended Mr. Lamuwa pending the outcome of the probe.

  • Federal might vs. organised labour

    Federal might vs. organised labour

    • By Aoiri Obaigbo

    Iya Kudi was looking crushed on Tuesday mid morning. For her, it would appear that it never rains but pours. A wind storm two month ago knocked down our electrical poles. For six weeks, there was none of what we all still call ‘Up NEPA’ in the neighbourhood. In the prolonged darkness, her business—ekeing out a living by making ice and chilling drinks —was grounded.  Then ‘NEPA’ brought light to other streets but our own ‘transformer had serious issues’, we were told.

    We had two options. An indefinite wait for them to bring us a new transformer with a hint that some areas have been waiting for years.  The second option was for us to raise the money—N25,000 per house.

     Iya Kudi made a lot of trouble with her house mates to make their contribution as she needed ‘up NEPA’ more than the others.

    At last, Friday before June 3, there was the joyous shout of “Up NEPA” as darkness took a break for eight hours.

     According to her, she had eaten deep into her slim capital and had to take a loan from the local lender. Hope was only beginning to seep back into the gloom of a life she endured, only to wake up this morning and ‘enemies of life’—translated from Yoruba—had gone to switch off the light.

    ‘It’s like they just want everyone to go jump down from Third Mainland Bridge in this country. Let’s just die and leave the country for only the rich and strong. They have no consideration for mekunu at all.’

    One never thought the day will come when Nigeria Labour Congress and Trade Union Congress would be counted as enemies of the poorer citizens.

    June 3, the organised labour commenced an indefinite strike over the demand for N494,000 minimum wage for Nigerian workers.

    Last-minute efforts to avert the strike ended in a deadlock, leading to full compliance by workers to the directives of the labour unions. Angry looking officials positioned themselves at the entrances to prevent workers from going into their offices.

    “Alluta Continua!”

    These industrial actions would usually have little or nothing to do with Iya Kudi and the mekunu she’s bemoaning, but the unionists  forced themselves into control rooms and shut down the national grid. If Iya Kudi had worked herself up into a medical emergency, she’d have had to use a native doctor as organised labour had also shut down the health sector.

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    The rules of engagement has been changed to exclude any consideration for people who are neither in a position to implement the wages demanded nor likely to benefit from whatever wage the combatants arrive at. Iya Kudi is about 70. In all these years, she must have experienced quite a few labour union agitations for money. Her late husband was a vulcaniser. Kudi, her daughter, makes dish washing liquid for a living and is married to a washerman in Kano. She’s the one who commissioned the construction of the freezer for her mother. So the entire family is in no situation to benefit from organised labour, but are suffering from the tyranny of the strike nonetheless.

    Stephen Ochai, chairperson of the Amalgamated Unions of Nigeria at the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology, was reported to have affirmed labour’s commitment to the strike until the government adopts a more reasonable stance and expressed the opinion  that 80 per cent of Nigerians on social media support their demands and actions.

    It’s difficult to ascertain how Stephen Ochai arrived at that percentage, but about 92.3% of Nigeria’s workforce operates in the informal sector. No matter how the fight  between government and organised labour ends, these workers often earn below the official minimum wage and lack formal employment contracts.

    The official wage policies have limited impact on the informal sector, where earnings are often as precarious as in Iya Kudi’s icy business.

    NLC and TUC should always consider that while their salaries will be paid, no matter how long they mount barricades, every hour the national grid is down puts in peril, the livelihood of the mekunu majority, most of whom aren’t on social media.

    For the voiceless majority, staring into space like Iya Kudi, inflation has been the enemy. Galloping prices have been terrorising the populace and it’s inconceivable that increasing payment for a slim but organised minority can make inflation disappear.

    The labour leadership has to  review their strategy of seasonally demanding more pay and disregarding other economic variables, including  the bottlenecks of extortion created by their members in their individual duty posts.

    They should also dig deeper on ways to tackle government on the rising cost of existing in Nigeria. Nigeria’s minimum wage currently stands at N33,000 naira ($39.40). Despite periodic revisions, over the years—including those from the melodramatic days of Adams Oshiomhole—it hasn’t ever matched the rising living costs, nor decreased greed and extortion among the civil servants and other members of organised labour.

    Empirical evidence over the years suggests that increasing the minimum wage merely increases unemployment and inflation rates. Because when wages rise, businesses  pass on the cost to consumers,  contributing to inflation.

    One expects a grand battle against the rising cost of governance and reactions against episodes like deflating an ailing economy by buying insanely expensive toys for members of the legislature to gallop over our bad roads. One expects leadership in demanding transparency about how the huge constituency votes of NASS are utilised. One expects TUC, especially, to actively engage and sensitise communities to know the difference between a senator’s legitimate earning and what’s meant for social investment in their communities. Waking up from slumber to demand for pay rise is way below what the masses expect from Labour leaders.

    It’s baffling that Labour set up a political party years ago and has remained stunted all these years in terms of political relevance and has shown little or no sensitivity to national gaps that need to be bridged. They have remained a reactive rather than proactive organisation.

    It’s disappointing when one looks back to where organised labour is coming from. The impact of NLC before it became a Congress, when it was in fragments but led by men whose names we can never forget because of  the leadership of courage and character they gave the masses at critical moments in our history.

    Who can forget the altruistic era of men like Michael Athokhamien Omnibus Imoudu, popularly known as Pa Imoudu, a labour union leader and activist? His relentless advocacy for justice and independence left an indelible mark on Nigeria’s labour movement.

    We grew up to hear his name on the lips of our parents and his unwavering fight against colonial authority remains an inspiration. He encouraged workers in both the private and public sectors to form unions, advocating for their rights and welfare, emphasising the importance of collective action and solidarity.

    Imoudu began his labour union activities as a member of the Railway Workers Union which became one of the most militant in Nigeria during the colonial era.

    Imoudu’s leadership waged battles not only for higher wages and improved conditions, but also to end casualisation and preferential treatment.

    Imoudu’s strike actions and advocacy forced the British colonial authorities to address workers’ rights and change oppressive laws.

    Frank Kokori was another labour union leader who transcended wage wars to play a pivotal role in Nigeria’s democratic struggle. He spent four years in jail for leading an effective oil and gas workers’ strike in 1994.

    The strike demanded the validation of the annulled 12 June 1993 presidential election and the release of the winner, Moshood Abiola. Today, June 12 is hallowed in the Nigerian calendar. Kokori’s struggle was instrumental to ending 29 years of military rule in Nigeria and opening the gates to this Fourth Republic.

    It’s true that the labour movements face new challenges grappling with globalisation, technological advancements, and changing work dynamics as the informal sectors have exploded,  making it harder to organise and protect workers’ rights. But the means of engagement have also become way faster and more democratic than ever before, so one rather sees the lack of will to mobilise beyond the fee paying membership.

    Fighting for higher minimum wages must be balanced with economic realities. Increasing the minimum wage in Nigeria requires a delicate balance, and the two elephants in this present tussle should consider both the formal and informal sectors, inflation dynamics, and overall economic stability.

    •Obaigbo is the author of The Wretched Billionaire.