Tag: May Day

  • Before we pray again

    SIR: It has become a commonplace for Nigerians to resort to endless posts of prayers on the social media and well-publicised fasting programmes most especially whenever any  incident occurs which can be attributed principally to human factors.

    With yet another bold statement on May Day by the notorious terrorist group Boko Haram, there have been renewed calls for re-assessment of the way we pray.

    I am a firm believer in the power of prayer and faith but it is also important that both go along with action. Today, we instal irresponsible leaders every four years; buy our ways to get an appointment/jobs; churn out millions of unemployed youth every year; put mediocrity/nepotism above credibility; place ethnic/tribal interest above national interest.

    We have also made corruption an institutionalised part of social life; we manipulate religion to suit our whims and caprices; maintain a presidential air fleet that can compete with any airline in the world; have an electoral body that can’t supervise a election into a federal constituency…the list is endless, yet we want God to come and clean up our mess.

    Every nation gets the kind of leader it deserves; in essence the quality of  leadership is dependent on the idiosyncrasies of followership.We are the change we want in our country not God or any supernatural being. Let’s do our part before we approach Almighty God because for all I know Him to be, he does no evil, harbours no evil and speak no evil.

     

    • Adebiyi Babatope Opeyemi.       

    Ado-Ekiti

  • May Day: Then and now

    May Day: Then and now

    Last Thursday was May Day, otherwise known as Workers Day. Years back, workers looked forward to May Day not only for its fanfare but also for the powerful words from Labour leaders to those in government; and oftentimes, from the head of state and governors.  Even in the military era, the military rulers did not joke with Labour because they understood the use to which its enormous powers could be put.

    But gone were those days. It seems the general fall in standards in the country has caught up with Labour too, with its leaders not knowing the value of what they carry. One expected the Labour leaders to be more vibrant and more articulate in a democratic setting. Unfortunately, it is not so; and unfortunately too, one does not know what could be responsible for this lethargy (some say it is docility) – whether it is the usual everybody has a price tag or it is just that the Labour leaders are overwhelmed by the sheer weight of the challenges confronting their members. Isn’t it baffling that there is nothing concrete from the unions over the missing Chibok secondary school girls? Nothing concrete from Labour over the spate of bombings? Nothing over the various scams that have almost emptied our treasury, etc?  Of course I understand perfectly well that Labour leaders cannot be divorced from the society and that a society gets the kind of Labour leaders (just as it gets the kind of political leadership) that it deserves.

    But President Goodluck Jonathan added salt to injury while addressing workers at the May Day rally held at the Eagle Square, Abuja.  “The challenge of the country is not poverty, but redistribution of wealth, he said.” The president was reacting to a World Bank report which categorised Nigeria among the five poorest countries in the world. He said further: “Nigeria is not a poor country. Nigerians are the most travelled people. There is no country you go that you will not see Nigerians. The GDP of Nigeria is over half a trillion dollars and the economy is growing at close to seven percent.”

    “Aliko Dangote was recently classified among the 25 richest people in the world . I visited Kenya recently on a state visit and there was a programme for Nigerians and Kenyan business men to interact and the number of private jets that landed in Nairobi that day was a subject of discussion in Kenyan media for over a week.

    “If you talk about ownership of private jets, Nigeria will be among the first 10 countries, yet they are saying that Nigeria is among the five poorest countries”, the president said. So, ownership of private jets is the barometer for measuring poverty and affluence in a country?  Some weird logic, you would say, but that is vintage President Jonathan who only yesterday traversed Bayelsa bare- footed, for you! Again, is a preponderance of private jets just a status symbol, or is it also a vote of no confidence in public air transportation in the country? My submission here is that President Jonathan should cast his mind back to those days he went without shoes; what would have been his reaction then if any leader had said poverty was not a Nigerian simply on account of the presence of many private jets in the country? Whatever that is is Nigerians’ feeling about his logic.

    Indeed, but for the fact that the president was amply quoted verbatim, and also for the fact that such statements are becoming part his conspicuous mannerism, one would have said he was misquoted. Almost every aspect of his speech is an indictment of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) which has been in power for about 15 consecutive years. What has the party done since the return to democratic rule in 1999 to redistribute the wealth?  Perhaps, by way of suggestion, I can be of help here, if the Bretton Woods expert/s and other financial juggernauts in the government’s think-tank have not thought along that line. Such a simple oversight can be allowed, especially in an economy where wealth is so unevenly distributed and government officials and politicians are some of the highest remunerated in the world.

    My prescription: let the government give to every Nigerian (including babies but excluding those with private jets and others who are stupendously rich) about N5million each. At least we can start the redistribution from here!

    But that is just by the by. On a more serious note however, there are many ways wealth can be redistributed without giving handouts to people: By way of scholarships to students, by liberalising access to finance, by making power available, and what have you. Obviously, the president either deliberately did not tell the workers or he conveniently forgot  to add that the chunk of the wealth in the hands of the few rich people in the country is ill-gotten. From pension fund scam to oil subsidy scam, to all manner of funds that are unaccounted for, especially in the oil industry; the whole place stinks.

    Of course, we can say President Jonathan is only being a ‘chip off the old block’ because former President Olusegun Obasanjo, his (now estranged) political godfather expressed a similar sentiment when he said years back that we cannot say Nigerians are poor because many of them, including even teachers, can now afford ‘tokunbo’ vehicles! But if the president must be told, this country can never have wealth properly distributed in so far as we continue to have the kind of scandalous jamboree like his National Conference whose participants get stupendously paid in a country where government approved a meagre N18,000 as minimum wage.

    I do not know how the workers reacted to the president’s speech and in fact would not be surprised if some of them, including their leaders, applauded it as an excellent one. But I know that in those days, such a speech would have attracted criticism from Labour leaders and the workers generally. How could the reward of what millions of hardworking Nigerian workers toiled for be in the pockets of a few?

    President Jonathan has spent the better part of his life in the south south region, so he might not be conversant with the proverb that “a rich man in the midst of six poor men is their chairman”. It is just that the poor hardly meet; otherwise, that would have been clear to such a rich man because he would always remain the one to be called to chair the meeting. But the earlier the president understood this fact, the better for him and the country. Part of why Boko Haram seems to have an endless number of suicide bombers is that wealth has been over-concentrated in the hands of a few for far too long. So, the situation demands far-reaching measures to reverse the ominous trend and not endless promises as usual from the Jonathan government which is tall in making promises but shot in delivery.

    Nothing in the president’s roadmap out of the wealth-lopsided logjam suggests he is on the right path. Indeed, he may be working assiduously in the wrong direction. His charted course is rather long and tortuous. It is like someone who wants to travel to Ibadan from Lagos and decides to go through the old road when all he could have done was hit the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway and save himself a lot of time, energy and resources. It is time for the government to begin to work fast in the right direction to avoid a situation where Boko Haram would be a national feature. Contrary to what President Jonathan thinks, there is no politics in the World Bank rating. There is no cheating in photographs; it is the way you sit that the camera captures. So, the earlier he addressed the problem, the better for him, the government and the nation at large.

    And, as for the Labour leaders, they need to go dust the books to see how their predecessors did it. Here, the works of Pa Michael Imoudu, Alhaji Hassan Sunmonu and Adams Oshiomhole, to mention only a few, would do. Not to talk of Frank Kokori, who was only secretary-general of the National Union of Petroleum Employees of Nigeria (NUPENG) but who many would think was NLC leader during the June 12 struggle. The times might have changed, the issues have not.

  • Nigeria not a poor nation – Jonathan

    Nigeria not a poor nation – Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan, on Thursday, faulted the World Bank report which placed Nigeria among the five poorest countries in the world, saying “the nation is not poor.’’
    Addressing workers at the May Day rally held at the Eagle Square, Abuja, the President said “the challenge of the country is not poverty, but redistribution of wealth.’’
    He said the realities on ground did not portray the country as a poor nation, but a nation which abundant wealth needed to be evenly redistributed.
    The President added that his administration was working assiduously and putting policies in place to ensure that Nigerians had access to financial resources to create wealth for themselves.
    “Nigeria is not a poor country. Nigerians are the most travelled people. There is no country you go that you will not see Nigerians. The GDP of Nigeria is over half a trillion dollars and the economy is growing at close to seven per cent.’’
    “Aliko Dangote was recently classified among the 25 richest people in the World.
    “I visited Kenya recently on a state visit and there was a programme for Nigerian and Kenyan business men to interact and the number of private jets that landed in Nairobi that day was a subject of discussion in Kenyan media for over a week.
    “If you talk about ownership of private jets, Nigeria will be among the first 10 countries, yet they are saying that Nigeria is among the five poorest countries.
    “Some of you will experience that there is an amount of money you will give to a Nigerian who needs help and will not even regard it and thank you but if you travel to other countries and give such an amount, the person will celebrate.
    “But the World Bank statistics shows that Nigeria is among the five poorest countries. Our problem is not poverty, our problem is redistribution of wealth.’’
    The President added that “probably wealth is concentrated in very few hands and a number of people do not have access to it and that is why my administration is committed in terms of financial inclusiveness and we are working very hard to achieve this.’’
    Jonathan specifically noted that in the agriculture sector, government introduced the electronic wallet for farmers in rural areas so they could access income through bank facilities.

     

  • Ex- NLC chief:  Nigeria’s minimum wage, GDP fake

    Ex- NLC chief: Nigeria’s minimum wage, GDP fake

    The N18, 000 mininum wage for workers across the country has been described as fake, just as the country’s hugely acclaimed gross domestic product growth.
    The former Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress in Yobe State, Com. Mohammed Bukar, disclosed this in Damaturu on Friday while fielding questions from journalists at the May Day celebration in the state.
    According to him, the unsteady and uncontrollable inflation and market prices in the country, coupled with the high taxation amount to an unrealistic N18, 000 minimum wage for workers in the country.
    “The so called minimum wage that we talk about in Nigeria is very unrealistic because of the biting inflation, uncontrollable market prices and high taxation. The truth is that if you go to the market today, people give their prices based on your appearance which is wrong. How can you judge the pocket of an individual from his appearance?”
    “These are the problems we are experiencing as workers in the country. With the high taxations and those other factors, what the Nigerian worker is earning is far less than the so called N18,000 minimum wage that we are talking about and government at all levels must act fast to solve these problems.
    “If you have high inflation in the country and the larger population is living from hand to mouth, how can you then claim that you have the best GDP in Africa? These are fake statistics that do not reflect the true position of the economy in every elementary sense,” Bukar said.

     

  • NLC to Nigerians: Embrace peace for sustainable development

    NLC to Nigerians: Embrace peace for sustainable development

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Thursday urged Nigerians to embrace peace and unity as critical tools for national development.
    The NLC President, Mr. Abdulwaheed Omar, made the call during the celebration of this year’s Workers’ Day in Abuja.
    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the theme for the event is: “Building Enduring Peace and Unity.”
    Omar said peace and unity were vital for the survival of many nations, adding that Nigerians must be rightly concerned about enduring peace.
    “The challenges of insecurity had continued to threaten peace and unity in the country, yet without enduring peace our nation cannot truly develop on a sustainable base.
    “In the past few years, the nation has witnessed unprecedented security challenges that have tasked our imaginations, resources and temperament.
    “From the Niger Delta to the northern part of the country, we have had one form of violence or the other that threatened the peace and security of the country.’’
    He described the insurgency in the North East, with the kidnap of more than 200 female students at Chibok in Borno, as the most threatening.
    “Our hearts bleed as we await their safety and release,’’ Omar said.
    According to him, anytime a bomb goes off or people hear the sound of a gun, “the humanity in us dies.”
    He expressed fear over the insurgency as people were losing their humanity, saying “we might even lose the entire nation if something drastic is not done.”
    The labour leader said that it was immoral to play politics with the life of citizens.
    He said in spite of government’s effort to tackle the menace in the northern region, the situation was deteriorating, urging government to get to end the mayhem.
    Omar also urged Nigerians to rise in unison to confront the enemy once and for all.
    He, however, called on government to address the issues of functional education, unemployment and poverty with urgency.

     

  • Jonathan gives three districts to FCT workers

    Jonathan gives three districts to FCT workers

    President Goodluck Jonathan has directed that three districts be allocated for housing schemes for workers in the Federal Capital Territory, the Minister, Alhaji Bala Mohammed, said.
    Mohammed announced the decision at a May Day rally in Abuja on Thursday, adding that the president directed that the houses should be made affordable.
    “In the recent time, Mr. President has commissioned more workers’ housing estates in the life of this nation; this can also be said in other sectors of the economy, such as health and education, among others ,’’ he said.
    The minister said the FCT Administration recently gave out 200 plots as Long Service Award to some of its employees who served meritoriously.
    He said that plans had been made to institutionalise the award.
    However, he said that the FCT Administration had been working assiduously to boost workers’ morale through various welfare programmes and incentives.
    Mohammed said the administration had adopted measures to check congestion at healthcare facilities in the territory arising from the influx of people.
    “In the light of this, scores of specialised medical and para-medical personnel have been recruited for this purpose.
    “As a worker-friendly administration, a Ministerial Committee on Hazard allowance has been constituted to address dangers being faced by some of our staff who perform duties that are considered hazardous,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the minister as saying at the forum.
    Mohammed pledged government’s determination to continue to explore ways to create a favourable environment for workers to give their best in effort to build a just and equitable society.
    He said the security challenges facing FCT residents would be addressed to ensure safety for law abiding citizens.

  • May Day: Nigerian workers want improved welfare

    Workers in Nigeria on Thursday joined their counterparts across the world to celebrate this year’s “May Day” popularly known as the workers’ day.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the day is being marked to renew workers agitation for improved working conditions and general welfare.
    The agitation, which started in the United States in 1860, was set aside to commemorate the struggle for eight hours.
    NAN recalls that this year’s is the 168th formal edition, while 68 countries are observing the day which member countries declared a public holiday.
    In Nigeria, the workers converged at the Eagle Square, Abuja, and the 36 state capitals to celebrate the occasion.
    In Osogbo, Osun State, the workers called for improved welfare package and prompt payment of salaries.
    A cross section of public and private workers told NAN in Osogbo that their current monthly emoluments hardly took them home.
    They said that only attractive salary, good working condition, training and retraining of workers could guarantee enhanced productivity.
    The Osun State Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Alhaji Saka Adesiyan, called for a review of the salary structure of workers in both public and private sectors so as to meet the present economic situation in the country.
    Adesiyan said that if there was an increase in the workers’ salaries, it would enhance productivity as well as improving the workers’ living standard.
    He said better salary structure as well as good work environment would go a long way in assisting workers to meet their responsibilities.
    Mrs. Sherifat Balogun, a civil servant, said government must ensure prompt payment of salaries and better working condition for workers.
    “We want to use this year workers’ day celebration to appeal to the state government to see to prompt payment of salaries as well as better work condition,” Balogun urged.
    On his part, the chairman of the Trade Union Congress in the state, Mr. Oladele Adetunji, criticised casualisation of workers in some government establishments and the private sector.
    He said the union would continue to agitate for better working conditions for employees.
    In Dutse, the NLC called on the Federal Government and other parties to embrace dialogue as a lasting solution to the security challenges facing the country.
    The state NLC Chairman, Mr. Sulaiman Adamu, made the call in his speech at the 2014 May Day celebration in Dutse.
    “Due to the insecurity ravaging the country, especially the North, we call on the Federal Government and other parties involved to embrace dialogue in order to bring lasting solution.
    “They should consider the lives and property of the people above their interests so as to allow peace to reign,’’ Adamu said.

  • PHOTO OF THE DAY (Gun and the Camera)

    PHOTO OF THE DAY (Gun and the Camera)

    Which is mightier, the Camera or the Gun? This question is informed by the picture of the security men and photojournalists at the May Day celebration in Abuja on Wednesday.

    On occasion like this, there is no need for either the policemen or the journalists to prove any superiority. The fully armed policemen were at the event not as members of any of the Unions marking the workers day celebration but to protect the government officials led by President Goodluck Jonathan while the photojournalists were also on duty to record the event.

     

     

     

  • QUOTE OF THE DAY

    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    For every one person I have offended, there are 10 others that are happy. Workers should be interested in the overall security of the people and the state. I hate lazy people. I have deep seated hatred for loafers. Should we promote people who are sleeping? We are wage earners and not wage takers. I am not a cheap politicians, I want to be a leader. Those who work, we will promote them, those who do not work will be sacked.

    Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole at May Day celebration in Benin

  • May Day: Not yet “uhuru’’ for Nigerian workers

    May Day: Not yet “uhuru’’ for Nigerian workers

    On May 1, Nigerian workers will join their counterparts all over the world to celebrate the International Labour Day.

    International Workers’ Day is the commemoration of the 1886 Haymarket affair in Chicago, the U.S.

    Reports had it that the police were trying to disperse a public assembly during a general strike for the eight-hour workday, when an unidentified person threw a bomb at them.

    The police reacted by firing on the workers, killing dozens of demonstrators and several of their own officers.

    In 1889, the first congress of the Second International, meeting in Paris for the centennial of the French Revolution and the Exposition Universelle, following a proposal by Raymond Lavigne, called for international demonstrations on the 1890 anniversary of the Chicago protests.

    May Day was formally recognised as an annual event at the International’s second congress in 1891

    The first Workers’ Day in Nigeria was celebrated in Kano State in 1980, as the then governor, Alhaji Abubakar Rimi, declared the day a public holiday.

    In 1981, however, the Federal Government declared May 1 the Workers’ Day.

    Since Nigeria started celebrating the May Day, the occasion is often used as an avenue for stock-taking by the organised labour and employers of labour.

    The theme of this year’s May Day is “100 Years of Nationhood, Challenges of National Development’’.

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) says that Nigerian workers have every cause to celebrate the 2013 May Day “with pomp and pageantry.’’

    Mr Promise Adeusi, the Deputy NLC President, said that the union had able to fight for the interests of Nigerian workers, citing the current national minimum wage as an instance.

    Adeusi said that the congress had also intervened by forcing telecommunication providers in the country to bring down their tariffs.

    “There have been some gains and pains. For instance, the minimum wage issue, we have been able to force some states to pay their workers what they should earn, just like their counterparts elsewhere.

    “Nowadays, the awareness of Nigerian workers is more than what it used to be in the past.

    “Telecom providers have come down with their tariffs and it is all about the input of the labour movement.

    “We are still working to keep the workers’ head up high and very soon, all this struggle will bring about shinning results,’’ he added.

    The Minister of Labour, Chief Emeka Wogu, said that the Federal Government had always supported the May Day celebration, adding that President Goodluck Jonathan would be part of this year’s celebration.

    “We are getting ready. You can see the excitement in the air. From what they told us, the organised labour will be 100 years this year and next year, Nigeria will become 100 years old.

    “So, we are celebrating the labour movement at the eve of 100 years of nationhood and there is no doubt that organised labour played a major role in the race for independence,’’ he stressed.

    However a cross-section of workers wants the government to give more attention to the workers’ welfare.

    They insist that Nigerian workers have been adjudged as the poorest remunerated among the top 10 global oil producers and members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

    Miss Tochi Nwofor, a public servant, said that that the workers’ salary vis a vis the people’s cost of living is still very poor.

    She also said that the government failed to build new staff quarters after selling the old staff quarters to their occupants some years ago.

    “An average Nigerian worker is always in need because he or she can hardly cope with the high costs of living in the country.

    “Some years back, several civil servants did not have to contend with house rent as they were living in staff quarters but the story is different now,’’ she said.

    Sharing similar sentiments, Mr Emeka Okoronkwo, a public servant, stressed that the wages of civil servants were still very poor.

    He argued that poor workers’ motivation would always foster low productivity because the workers, irrespective of their multifaceted responsibilities, lacked the financial capability to function efficiently.

    “The so-called minimum wage is too insignificant to improve the lives of workers in these harsh economic times,’’ he said.

    Okoronkwo called on the government to enhance the workers’ salary to reflect the high cost of living in the society, particularly the soaring prices of goods in the market and the high cost of transportation and accommodation.

    He urged the government to either build staff quarters or allocate land to its agencies to erect low-cost houses for their staff, adding that such an policy would alleviate the plight of workers in getting affordable accommodation, particularly in expensive cities like Abuja, Lagos and Part Harcourt.

    Nevertheless, Mr Paul Olowo, another public servant, bemoaned the high level of corruption in the country.

    He urged the anti-corruption agencies to make tangible efforts to curb corruption in the country.

    “The level of corruption is still astronomical; people are looting public resources with sheer impunity.

    “Most times, monies meant for the welfare of workers in some parastatal agencies are pocketed by some highly placed persons in these agencies and nobody does anything about it.

    “With the level of kidnapping, armed robbery, assassinations and the violence perpetrated by Boko Haram, many workers now operate with fear; they, therefore, cannot put in their best, ’’ he said.

    All in all, analysts urge the government to give priority attention to the workers’ welfare.

    They also want the government to close the gap between Nigerian workers and their counterparts in other oil-producing countries. (NANFeatures)