Tag: Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC)

  • Workers’ salaries: NLC to tackle Benue, Rivers government 

    Workers’ salaries: NLC to tackle Benue, Rivers government 

    Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) will soon tackle state owning workers’ salaries, NLC president, Ayuba Wabba has said.

    Wabba said Rivers and Benue states have been listed as priority states in the union will take on for not paying workers and pensioners.

    Wabba gave the hint during a meeting with Representatives of primary health care workers from Rivers, who were on solidarity visit at the weekend.

    Let’s not be under any illusion that any employer will give you your rights on a platter of gold, because there are competing demands,” he said.

    Rivers and Benue are among priority states the NLC will tackle for not paying workers and pensioners, insisting worker pay and resulting spending power could help lift the country out of recession.

    “Payment of salaries is not about resources; it is about priorities and we are not getting it right,” Wabba said of defaulting states.

    “For any system to get out of recession, citizens must have resources to buy and sell and pull the economy out of recession,” he noted.

    Speaking about continued neglect of worker demands, Wabba said, “Most of our workers are treated as slaves. Employment is a contract. We work, and it is difficult for [employers] to meet the terms of bargain.”

    Wabba also told the rivers state health workers who also used the meeting as a fence mending mission said, “Unity and sanctity of our movement is protected”, insisting it would strengthen workers’ bargaining power.”

    At the fence mending meeting which was held in Abuja, the workers also agreed to withdraw the case instituted against the leadership of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC).
    Both sides will today appear before the National Industrial Court to announce they have resolved to settle out of court.
    Rivers state NLC chairperson, Mrs Beeatrice Itubo announced at the meeting that Rivers health workers have agreed to withdraw their matter in court and pursue the part of peace.

    She added, “We will walk to court and tell the world that health workers ate civilised people and can resolve issues among themselves.

    “Only then we can resolve and see their issues sorted out in the state,” Beatrice Itubo, who chairs NLC in Rivers and was former state chairperson of MHWUN in Rivers when the contention started three years ago.

    “When you are speaking as a body, undivided, I think government will hear what you are saying,” she said, explaining outcome expected after both sides resolved to settle internal differences.”

    More than 3000 workers in primary health, under the aegis of MHWUN, were left out of harmonised health salary scale across the 23 local government areas of Rivers after council authorities failed to implement the scale for them.

    Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria (MHWUN), President Joe Biobelemoye said “We have wasted two years speech making.”

    Officials say no two local government health workers are paid similarly, and computation of pay and benefits are at the unilateral discretion of council authorities.

  • Gas, Kerosene price hike: Makurdi residents opt for firewood

    Gas, Kerosene price hike: Makurdi residents opt for firewood

    Some residents of Makurdi have opted for the use of firewood having decried the high cost of cooking gas and kerosene, which they said had inflicted much hardship on low-income earners.

    Those who spoke with newsmen on Thursday stated that the cost of obtaining the two sources of domestic energy for cooking had doubled in recent times.

    They said firewood which is cheaper, cost effective and always available, was the only way out.

    Retailers of gas now refill the 12.5kg at N5, 500, as against the price of N4000, while the 5kg cylinder now attracts N3, 500, as against the N1, 400.

    Mrs Msughshima Wever, a gas retailer at Wadata, told NAN that the increase was as a result of the exchange rate of the dollar to the Naira.

    She called for the intervention of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and Federal Government and expressed the fear that the price could go even higher if nothing was done.

    Sewuese Azer, a business woman said though the product was scarce in Makurdi, she cannot afford it with such exorbitant price.

    “I opted for firewood long ago, I am a farmer too, I don’t even buy firewood, I pick them in the farm, no cost implication,” she said.

    Matina Ashever, a gas user, said that she refilled her 2kg cylinder at the rate of N1600 in December, but inquired to buy in January and was told it was N2500.

    “I have resorted to firewood as my next option. I wash my pots with potash and sand; its clean, it is also cost-effective, ” she said.

    Mr Terver Akisa, a firewood merchant, told NAN that his business was booming with high patronage since the New Year.

    “Most customers murmur and complain about the prices of gas and kerosene whenever they come to buy firewood,” Akisa said.

    Mega gas distributors, the NNPC mega station, AUSTOMA Gas and NEXIM gas plants had various signposts indicating there was no gas.

  • Police attack protesting Labour leaders

    Police attack protesting Labour leaders

    The Police in Ebonyi State yesterday attacked and beat up members of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) who staged a peaceful protest in the state against the increase in pump price by the federal government.

    The workers were intercepted near Pastoral Centre along the Abakaliki-Enugu Expressway as they were on the peaceful protest by a detachment of Police officers who proceeded to attack the workers.

    The Police, it was gathered,  tear gassed the workers ceaselessly and beat up leaders of the union including the Chairman Comrade Ikechukwu Nwafor who was seen rolling on the ground as the Police officers kicked and beat him.

    He was later bundled into the waiting white Police Hillux van by four police officers and taken to the Police Headquarters in Abakaliki alongside about 15 other labour leaders.

    The Police claimed the workers did not obtain Police clearance to carry out the protest, an allegation debunked by Comrade Nwafor.

    The workers had gathered as early as 8am at their secretariat along the expressway and took off on the protest along the expressway.

    On getting to the Pastoral Centre, the workers met a detachment of Police Officers who unleashed an attack the workers tear gassing them ceaselessly.

    One of the Labour leaders, Comrade Greg Ishaya was seen at the police Station with minor injuries on his hands from the attack.

    Comrade Ikechukwu Nwafor was in pain as he sustained serious knee injuries and was limping. He relied on the support of other labour leaders to walk when our reporter met him at the station after the attack.

    The Police Commissioner in the State denied that the workers were attack adding that the police used minimal force to disperse the crowd adding that the protesters did not inform the Police before embarking on the protest.

    But Comrade Nwafor debunked the allegation adding that the command duly informed the police of the protest.

    He said, “We were on a peaceful demonstration against the increase in fuel pump price and electricity tariff when the police attacked us. We gave them a letter, I was calling the Commissioner and she didn’t pick my calls and we have evidence to that”

    “What we were doing is a peaceful demonstration and all of a sudden the police came and attacked us. The police when we saw them we thought they were coming to protect us. They tear gassed us. They lifted me up and hit me on the ground and gave me a thorough beating. Five of them later lifted me up and threw into their hillux van like a common criminal”.

  • Fuel subsidy: Group urges FG to ignore Wabba faction

    Fuel subsidy: Group urges FG to ignore Wabba faction

    A political pressure group, Grassroots Mobilizers for Buhari (GMB) has urged the federal government to ignore the Ayuba Wabba faction of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and never to engage them in any form of dialogue.

    A statement released by the South-South Media Director of the group, Dr Fred Latimore Oghenesivbe said Nigerians have resolved to put the issue of fuel subsidy behind them as a major step towards the nation’s socioeconomic remodelling.

    He further asserted that Ayuba and his corrupt comrades are trying to intimidate the federal government so as to be settled behind closed doors, adding that the rush for strike action when the government was making genuine and frantic efforts to work out additional palliative to cushion the effects of the fuel price increase is suspicious, unreasonable and ill-motivated.

    GMB is also alleging that Comrade Ayuba and his co-travellers are being sponsored by the opposition to discredit the APC national government, which makes their so-called struggle a show of shame.

    Dr Oghenesivbe asserted that a situation where key affiliate groups of NLC opted out of the strike including the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) goes to show that Ayuba and his group of economic saboteurs are serving their stomachs and not the Nigerian workers.

    The group commended the anti corruption war of the federal government and appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure that the NLC commences the immediate repayment of the N2 billion Naira loan granted to it some years ago; and to investigate any fraud associated with the disbursement and utilization of the loan.

    We wish to state without fear or favour that Comrade Ayuba Wabba and his group are enemies of national progress for planning to crumble the nation’s economy at a time our country is going through trying times occasioned by low oil prices and 16 years of misrule by PDP, the statement added.

  • Lagos: Factional NLC protest disrupts aviation activities

    Lagos: Factional NLC protest disrupts aviation activities

    • Airlines operate skeletal flights amid cancellation
    Unions in the aviation industry yesterday joined factional wing of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), acting under the aegis of Joint Action Front to disrupt vehicular and passenger activities around the Lagos Airport as part of protest against the deregulation of the downstream sector of the petroleum industry.
    The unions are the National Union of Airport Transport Employees (NUATE) and the Association of Senior Services Staff Association of Nigeria (ATSSSAN).
    This is just as they threatened to shut down the Lagos Airport on Thursday, should government fail to reverse the increase in the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), otherwise known as petrol.
    The factional wing of NLC, led other protesters to block major roads leading into the Lagos Airport occasioning traffic gridlock on the Mobolaji Bank Anthony Way, Ikeja.
    They took possession on the road in the early hours thus depriving limousine cab operators from taking passengers and airport workers to the airport.
    Besides the protest, some domestic carriers including DANA Air, Arik, Aero, First Nation Airways, Med-View operated skeletal services.
    Most of them had to cancel or re-schedule flights because of limited passengers.
    Most of the aviation agencies including the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), opened their offices for normal activities.
  • NLC protest disrupts aviation activities at Lagos Airport

    NLC protest disrupts aviation activities at Lagos Airport

    Unions in the aviation industry Wednesday joined factional wing of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), acting under the aegis of Joint Action Front to disrupt vehicular and passenger activities around the Lagos Airport as part of protest against the deregulation of the downstream sector of the petroleum industry.

    The unions are the National Union of Airport Transport Employees (NUATE) and the Association of Senior Services Staff Association of Nigeria (ATSSSAN).

    This is just as they threatened to shut down the Lagos Airport on Thursday, should government fail to reverse the increase in the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), otherwise known as petrol.

    The factional wing of NLC, led other protesters to block major roads leading into the Lagos Airport occasioning traffic gridlock on the Mobolaji Bank Anthony Way, Ikeja.

    They took possession of the road in the early hours thus depriving limousine cab operators from taking passengers and airport workers to the airport.

    Besides the protest, some domestic carriers including DANA Air, Arik, Aero, First Nation Airways, Med-View operated skeletal services.

    Most of them had to cancel or re-schedule flights because of limited passengers.

    Most of the aviation agencies including the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), opened their offices for normal activities.

     

     

  • Senate: Retirement home of ex-governors – Ezekwesili

    Senate: Retirement home of ex-governors – Ezekwesili

    The former Education Minister, Oby Ezekwesili on Monday reacted to the revelation from the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), which claimed that the Nigerian Senate inflated the cost of buying Toyota Land Cruiser Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs) for its members.

    Speaking through posts on her social media handle, Ezekwesili described the act as wicked demanding that Citizen occupy the National Assembly.

    Her reactions: “Governance has a Supply and a Demand side. For 50+years in Nigeria, only the Supply Side was active and so learned the bad ways of Monopolists.

    “Monopolists have no incentive to be efficient with product/price since there is no consequence. Sole Supply Side, Governance acts same.”

    The former minister stressed that until citizens activate the demand side of governance and pressure the supply side to be accountable and effective, good governance may never be realized in Nigeria.

    “The Senate needs to hear from as many of us – Citizens – as possible that we stopped laughing at their expensive jokes a long time ago,” she noted.

    Please find her posts below:

     

    In a statement made available to The Nation in Abuja and signed by its President, Comrade Ayuba Wabba, the NLC accused the Senate of spending money without appropriation when it publicly admitted that its standing committees cannot carry out their functions due to paucity of funds.

    The congress said while the senate purchased each of the cars for N35.1 million, the actual market price of the vehicles stands at N17 million.

    Read Full Report

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  • NLC threatens strike over fuel scarcity

    NLC threatens strike over fuel scarcity

    • We won’t frustrate govt’s efforts, says NUPENG
    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) on Monday threatened mass action if the persistent fuel scarcity is not urgently addressed.
    It said it could be forced to demonstrate against public officers who have not delivered on their mandate and to demand their removal for allowing increasing suffering and deprivation to become the lot of Nigerians.
    “Electricity has become an essential commodity, public utilities have since gone to the dogs, petroleum products have grown wings and vanished, compounding an already bad transport system, reducing Nigerians in all parts of the nation to compulsory trekkers.
    “Having observed the increasing alarm and seeming confusion within the corridors of power on possible solutions to the socio-economic quagmire, we make haste to say that Nigeria is indeed at crossroads today and the extent of suffering is such that this nation has not witnessed throughout its history.
    “We, therefore, want the government at the centre to quickly talk to Nigerian workers and the masses on why we should continue having trust and patience with them.
    “We urge them to tell us why we should not be in the streets calling for mass resignations of officers of this government, and to also tell us why we should not be worried when all the macro-economic indices are moving downwards,” NLC said.
    NLC, at a briefing in Lagos by its factional president, Comrade Joe Ajaero, along with his deputy, Achese Igwe, who doubles as the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) president, urged the government to focus on getting the refineries working.
    It said the licenses granted local refiners should be reviewed and withdrawn from those who lack the capacity.
    The workers’ body said with stolen funds being returned by looters, the government should deploy the monies to execution of projects.
    “We urge the government to come clean as promised and account for what it has actually recovered from the treasury looters, giving Nigerians details of the culprits and how much each stole.
    “We also urge the president and his cabinet to set up appropriate machinery to deploy the recovered funds to fill the resource gaps complained about because of the dip in global oil prices,” NLC said.
    Igwe said NUPENG was willing to collaborate with the government to ensure the petroleum products are distributed seamlessly when available.
    He added, however, that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) was yet to reach out to NUPENG leadership on how the union can help end the fuel crisis.
    “NNPC is yet to partner with NUPENG. They are yet to sit down with NUPENG on how to get this problem solved. But we are willing to partner with NNPC to end this fuel crisis,” Igwe said.
    On the leadership crisis in NLC, Ajaero said his faction was still open to reconciliation, adding a seven-man committee that was set up to reconcile the factions at the state chapter level was frustrated.
    “We are waiting for reconciliation. For now we have two NLCs, one for the government and one for the people. We are for the people,” Ajaero said.