Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • ‘Why Nigeria has no airport hubs’

    Despite Nigeria’s huge population, it has no airport hubs because it lacks terminals that can accelerate transit for passengers on domestic, regional and international flights, Chief Executive Officer, African Aviation Services Limited, Nick Fadugba, has said.

    Besides facilities for passengers’ transit, local carriers are not strong enough to attract global partnership to offer passengers reliable services on routes beyond point-to-point, a development that is no longer fashionable among international carriers.

    In an interview in Lagos, Fadugba said the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos and the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja were yet to qualify as a hub for West Africa because they do not command the kind of facilities that would attract global carriers as transit terminals to connect passengers to any where in the globe.

    Fadugba said global carriers are attracted to airports with modern facilities where turn around time is swift, services are reliable and airlines could refuel and enjoy many economies of scale.

    Read Also: Airport intruder: Union leader calls for overhaul of airports’ security

    He said the  weak status of many domestic carriers with limited aircraft fleet, unreliable schedules and lack of capacity to share interline and codeshare agreements with global carriers continue to undermine the drive for hub status for Nigerian airports.

    Fadugba said airports in Accra, Cairo, Casablanca, Dakar, Addis Ababa, Nairobi and  Johannesburg which have developed modern infrastructure and processes to attract global legacy carriers with aircraft fleet and network, Nigerian airports needed to be reworked to accommodate attractive hub facilities.

    He said: “Nigerian airports still have a long way to go to become significant hubs in Africa because they have inadequate facilities that will facilitate seamless passengers’ transit.

    “Government needs to tear down and build a modern terminal at Lagos Airport with at least three runways that will facilitate seamless connectivity. Government needs to urgently look at land facilities at the Abuja Airport and at least build two runways for easy connectivity.

    “Developing an airport hub is not by accident but through careful planning and strategy . To achieve, this government should look at airport size, and the readiness of the airspace to accommodate the exponential traffic that it will trigger if modern facilities are put in place.

    “This is what other countries have done by empowering their airlines, modernising their fleet, securing operational agreements and partnership to position them as catalyst for economic development.”

  • Oil workers call for job creation policies

    Oil workers have urged the Federal Government to put in place, policies that will translate to massive job creation in the country.

    Acting under the aegis of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), they said its only when jobs are created that criminal activities would be reduced.

    Speaking with The Nation, its National President, Comrade Williams Akporeha, urged President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure that all relevant agencies are compelled to implement the relevant Executive Orders without delay so as to foster value addition in the nation’s human capital development and utilisation of material resources and services.

    Read Also: ‘Technology’ll check poor forecast, risks in oil industry’

    He also appealed that the application of local content law should be geared towards the creation of decent jobs for Nigerians.

    Akporeha argued that casualisation of jobs, especially in the oil and gas industry, was appalling and disturbing in view of the high expectations and premium it placed on the Nigeria Content Development and Management Board (NCDMB) since its creation.

  • ‘Why traders do not buy insurance’

    LOW purchasing power seems to be hindering traders from buying insurance policies that can protect their business, findings by The Nation has shown.

    Some of the traders, however, said they buy third party motor insurance because, according to them, it is compulsory for them to have it.

    The Nation visited some markets to ascertain the level of insurance awareness.

    A spare part dealer at Ladipo Market, Mushin, Lagos, Mr Anieke Levi said he was aware of that he needed insurance for his business.

    He urged insurance firms to make the policies affordable for market men and women.

    He said while he had not bought any insurance policy, his car is insured.

    Read Also: Motor insurance a must, says Insurers Committee

    He noted that he bought motor insurance so that the police and vehicle inspection officers would not seize his vehicle driving on the road.

    Another trader, Valentine Anierobi said he could not afford to buy insurance.

    ‘’I struggle every day to make a living. Is it possible for me to buy insurance after struggling to make little money? Maybe, I will think of insurance when I am able to feed and clothe myself well,’’ he said.

    Mrs. Blessing Nweago does not believe in insurance.

    ‘’My business is okay, it doesn’t need insurance,’’ she said.

  • ‘Technology’ll check poor forecast, risks in oil industry’

    An indigenous player in the upstream sector of the oil and gas industry, Seplat Petroleum Development Company Plc, has stressed the need to deploy modern technologies in the industry.

    Its Executive Operations Director,  Mr. Effiong Okon, said the adoption of technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), big data and mobile technology, would not only drive planning and forecast, but help in addressing risks associated with the business in the industry.

    Okon spoke at a panel session of the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), Nigeria Council’s annual conference that focused on: Artificial Intelligence, Big data and Mobile technology: Changing the Future of the energy industry in Lagos at the weekend.

    Speaking on: Transforming Big data and technology to Business value: Challenges and strategic options, Okon said leveraging cloud computing and big data, for instance, promotes accurate forecast of oil production for planning. This, in turn, drives operational excellence (production optimisation and asset performance).

    The use of predictive and data-driven maintenance for production and cost efficiency, according to him, has helped to reduce Mean Time to Repair (MTTR), and increase Mean Time Before Failure (MTBF) in the industry.

    Read Also: Why local content matters in oil and gas industry- Jeon

    For drilling, he said operators can get predictive analysis through smart drilling; guarantee early identification of drilling anomalies, hazards to well control problems. It could help to develop more Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) techniques;  real time data through Logging While Drilling (LWD) and Measurement While Drilling (MWD), he added.

    He said in the area of exploration and appraisal, technology had made it possible to obtain big data from sensors attached to equipment used during exploration/appraisal activities (seismic, wells). This  will further help in improving subsurface mapping and new well delivery performance through micro-seismic 3D imaging.

    Narrating the Seplat technology story, Okon said the company had continued to make conscious efforts to drive operations using contemporary technologies, with the right investments. According to him, Seplat’s investments in technologies are driven by measurable and justifiable value accruable to the company.

    “With the right technology, we can identify rock and fluid properties through Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI); locate new oil fields through Wide azimuth towed streamer (WATS) Acquisition; and analyse big data through Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) for cost efficiency.

    “It also applies to oil/gas transportation while connecting pipelines, sensors, leak detection, alarms and emergency shutdowns; using drone technology for pipeline surveillance.

    “Internet of Things (IoT) is revolutionising midstream pipeline operations through Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) -based applications,” he said.

    In the area of refining, Okon said operators could now analyse economic indicators and weather patterns for forecasting demand, pricing and resource allocation while optimising integrated refineries and leveraging machine learning for predictive analysis and self-diagnosis by refineries.

    He said: “These technologies have a huge role to play in the future of the oil and gas industry. The need for smart, cost efficient ways to access unconventional reservoirs is undoubted.”

  • Election Tribunal upholds Ondo Rep’s victory

    The National and State Houses of Assembly elections petition tribunal in Ondo state has dismissed the petition of Abayomi Akinfemiwa of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seeking to upturn of the election of  Mayowa Akinfolarin  of the All progressives Congress (APC) for Ile-Oluji Okeigbo/Odigbo federal constituency.

    The three-man panel headed by justice Nuhu Adi said the petitioner could not prove his allegation of malpractices and non-compliance  with the electoral act during the February 2019 National Assembly elections.

    The two-hour judgement, which was read by Justice Victor Okorie, appraised the submissions of counsels to the petitioner and the respondents.

    The tribunal held that the testimony of the petitioner and some of his principal witnesses did not correspond with their statement on oath and as such could not stand.

    Read Also: Group expresses confidence in C/River election tribunal

    The judges noted that the onus lies on the petitioner to prove his case beyond reasonable doubt, if INEC, the  third respondent, refused to  call any witness.

    The tribunal also held that the petitioner failed to establish the allegation of over voting in some polling units, non accreditation and other forms of non-compliance.

    It therefore described the petition as lacking in merit, struck it out and upheld the election of Mayowa Akinfolarin as duly elected representative for ile-Oluji/Oke Igbo/Odigbo Federal Constituency.

    With the resolution of this case, there are three more petitions to be dispensed out of the seven filed before the tribunal within its 180 days time frame.

  • IoD seeks deeper engagement on AfCFTA

    The Institute of Directors (IoD) said there was need for the Federal Government to further engage relevant stakeholders  on the prospects and challenges of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement.

    Its new President/Chairman, Governing Council, Chief Chris Okunowo, who spoke in Lagos during his inauguration, said the trade liberalisation deal that promises to create a continental trade bloc of 1.2 billion people, with a combined Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of about $3.3 trillion.

    With this huge financial promise, Okunowo said there was need to further engage with stakeholders in both the private and public sectors whose diverse inputs will further help strengthen relevant institutions to allow the country to take advantage of the agreement to boost trade and investment.

    Read Also: ‘Oil service firms to benefit from AfCFTA‘

    Okunowo said such engagement was with a view to enhancing the country’s chances of benefiting optimally from the treaty  signed by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Buhari had signed the free trade deal on July 7, this year, at the 12th Extra-ordinary Summit of African Union (AU) Heads of State and Government in Niamey, Niger Republic.

    This came about 16 months after foot-dragging on the signing of the hotly-debated AfCFTA, with Buhari citing the need to consult widely with stakeholders on the benefits or otherwise of joining the continental trade bloc.

  • Democracy must thrive, says Alaafin

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Olayiwola Adeyemi  111,  has urged Muslims to reflect on the Eid and invoke the mercy of Allah and His blessings.

    In his Id El Kabir message,  Oba Adeyemi said it is imperative to remember that Eid al-Adha symbolizes piety.

    He said: ‘’This act of godliness, as exemplified by Prophet Ibrahim (pbuh), calls for perpetual sober reflection, submission to the will of Allah, and sincerity of purpose from all of us. as directed by Allah.

    The paramount ruler advised  Nigerians to cooperate with government in its efforts to restore security.

    Read Also: Alaafin of Oyo congratulates Ganduje over victory

    He said: “What we require to overcome our own peculiar trials and earn similar monumental blessings permanently is total and unquestioning surrender to the will of Allah in the conduct of our daily affairs”.

    ”The various threats to security, as well as the numerous forms of corruption bedevilling our society and the resultant implications of these for the economy are nothing but results of lack of consciousness of ultimate accountability to God, especially in the life to come. This is also true of the mistrust that hinders cordiality among our various ethnic and religious groups.

    ”What we need, as a nation, are sincere, concerted and sustained efforts towards propagating the kind of God-consciousness demonstrated by Prophet Ibrahim.”

    Oba Adeyemi said these virtues   will guarantee lasting solutions to  the challenges confronting the country.

  • 24 firms suffering from overconcentration of shares, says NSE

    ABOUT 24 companies are suffering from over concentration of shares in the hands of core investors and directors. This keeps them below the listing standard at the equities market and may make them susceptible to price manipulation.

    The updated regulatory report on the governance status of quoted companies, obtained at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) at the weekend, indicated that the companies have less than the required minimum number of shares that should be available to minority retail shareholders, a major infraction that may adversely affect liquidity and efficient price discovery.

    Minimum number of shares available for the minority retail investing public, known as free float, is a major listing requirement at the stock market. Companies listed on the Exchange are required to maintain a minimum free float for the set standards under which they are listed in order to ensure that there is an orderly and liquid market in their securities.

    Under the rules of the NSE, companies listed on the premium board are required to have 20 per cent free float or over N40 billion of their capitalisation in the hands of investing public. Companies on the main board are required to have a minimum free float of 20 per cent of their market capitalisation, implying that 20 per cent of the companies’ shareholdings must be available for minority retail shareholders.

    Read Also: ‘Stock market may remain depressed’

    However, companies on the Alternative Securities Market (ASeM) are required to have 15 per cent free float.

    Free float, otherwise known as public float, refers to the number of shares of a quoted company held by ordinary shareholders other than those directly or indirectly held by its parent, subsidiary or associate companies or any subsidiaries or associates of its parent company; its directors who are holding office as directors of the entity and their close family members and any single individual or institutional shareholder holding a statutorily significant stake, which is five per cent and above in Nigeria.

    Thus, free float’s shares do not include shares held directly or indirectly by any officer, director, controlling shareholder or other concentrated, affiliated or family holdings.

    The deficient companies included AG Leventis, Capital Hotel, Caverton Offshore Support Group, Champion Breweries, Ekocorp, eTranzact International, Infinity Trust Mortgage, The Tourist Company of Nigeria, Transcorp Hotels, Union Bank of Nigeria and Portland Paints & Products Nigeria.

    Others included Global Spectrum Energy Services, CWG, Aluminium Extrusion, Union Dicon Salt, Austin Laz & Company, Notore Chemical Industries, Medview Airline, Skyway Aviation Handling Company, Omoluabi Mortgage Bank, Ellah Lakes, Cement Company of Northern Nigeria, Lafarge Africa and Prestige Assurance.

    The report showed that several companies have major free float deficiency with less than five per cent of their shares available for public trading. The Exchange indicated that it has given about five companies deadlines to redress the free float deficiency while it is also engaging some 12 companies on their free float deficiency. Also, five companies have sought for the extension of the deadline to redress their deficiency.

    According to the report, AG Leventis has free float of 11.80 per cent, Capital Hotel, 2.99 per cent; Caverton Offshore Support Group, 17.30 per cent; Champion Breweries, 17.17 per cent; Ekocorp, 12.64 per cent; eTranzact International, 17.77 per cent; Infinity Trust Mortgage, 3.50 per cent; The Tourist Company of Nigeria, 1.75 per cent; Transcorp Hotels, six per cent; Union Bank of Nigeria, 10.39 per cent while Portland Paints & Products Nigeria has free float of 14.57 per cent.

    Others were Global Spectrum Energy Services, 7.01 per cent; CWG, 15.97 per cent; Aluminium Extrusion, 17.99 per cent; Union Dicon Salt,18.00 per cent;  Austin Laz & Company, 19.36 per cent; Notore Chemical Industries, 10.02 per cent; Medview Airline, 14.16 per cent; Skyway Aviation Handling Company, 19.39 per cent; Omoluabi Mortgage Bank, 1.96 per cent; Ellah Lakes, 13.83 per cent; Cement Company of Northern Nigeria, 2.97 per cent; Lafarge Africa, 16.13 per cent and Prestige Assurance, which has a free float of 18.95 per cent.

    With the exception of Omoluabi Mortgage Bank, quoted on the Alternative Securities Market (ASeM) and as such required to have 15 per cent free float, all the other companies are listed on the main board of the Exchange and are required to have a minimum float of 20 per cent.

    Stock markets maintain minimum public float to prevent undue concentration of securities in the hands of the core investors and related interests, a situation that can make the stock to be susceptible to price manipulation. Besides, it provides the general investing public with opportunity to reasonably partake in the wealth creation by private enterprises.

    Companies are usually given a timeline to free up shares and cure their free float deficiency. Failure by deficient companies to restructure their share capital at the expiration of the deadline or secure extension of the deadline may lead to delisting of their shares from the NSE.

    Free float deadline is usually in deference to application by the management of a company for some period to comply with the free float. However, the company is required to provide quarterly disclosure report to the NSE on the efforts being made to fully comply by the deadline.

    By the expiration of the deadline, a company is expected to have completed partial divestments or dilution of the ‘non-public’ shareholdings to free the required percentage of equity stake for public holding, unless the management of the NSE grants fresh waivers and extensions for the companies. In the extreme instance, a company with deficient public float may opt to delist its shares.

    Alternatively, deficient companies may opt to move from the main board to the ASeM or in the extreme cases, opt to delist their shares from the Exchange.

    The Exchange, meanwhile, usually tags companies with free float deficiencies with a red alert of “Below Listing Standard”, which implies non-conformity with the requisite listing and corporate governance requirements.

     

  • Much ado about casualisation in banking industry

    To cut cost and maximise profit, banks and other financial institutions are increasingly turning to contract staff as opposed to full employment. But the practice, otherwise known as casualisation, has drawn the ire of labour activists and other stakeholders. Many of them argue that the cost-cutting measure can threaten the stability of the banking system, if not checked, TOBA AGBOOLA reports.

    It may have been a corporate survival strategy foisted on banks and other financial institutions by the prevailing economic realities in Nigeria. But, banks’ resort to contract staffing as an option to cut cost and maximise profit in an increasingly challenging and competitive business environment, has not gone down well with labour activists and other critical stakeholders. To them, it’s opposed to full employment,

    Indeed, the country has been witnessing a downturn in economic activities, forcing many banks to look at ways of cutting back on their spending as their profits dropped. Consequently, many of them opted to engage casual workers, popularly known as ‘contract staff’.  But in doing so, they have pitched themselves against labour unionists, stakeholders and the contract staff so engaged.

     

    Labour, stakeholders kick

    Some stakeholders, who spoke with The Nation, expressed fears that the increasing spate of casualisation in banks may be responsible for the rising cases of frauds in the banking industry. According to them, most frauds in banks may have been perpetrated by contract staff whose meagre salaries are barely enough to keep their eyes away from depositors’ funds.

    One of the stakeholders, who preferred to be anonymous, recalled, for instance, that a contract staff in one of the new generation banks in Lagos recently attempted to steal a box ful of dollar notes after the bank had closed for the day. He said it was in a bid to avert this kind of scenario that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) warned commercial banks to desist from giving sensitive banking roles to contract staff, as they do not have a stake in the banks.

    Read Also: ‘Youth unemployment undermines Africa’s growth potential’

    A former CBN Director, Banking and Payments System Department, ‘Dipo Fatokun, lent credence to this when he noted that the apex bank has severally encouraged banks to ensure that their staff are those with something at stake. “A temporary staff may not have a stake in the bank so to say. So, it is encouraged that if they have members of staff, who are not regular staff, they should not give them responsibilities or roles that will expose them to critical functions of a bank.

    “If you are giving somebody an authority to approve transactions of high magnitude, and he does not have a stake in your bank, then you are already exposing yourself. So, this has been going on and I believe many banks understand the need to rely on their key staff for major duties. That is one of the reasons fraud attempts have been rising, but the value lost is declining.”

    For the National President, Association of Senior Staff of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions (ASSBIFI), Comrade Oyinkan Olasanoye, the country Labour Act has not been fair to workers. She said under the Act, organisations can use outsourced staff, but they cannot be used for more than six months before they are converted to full-time employees.

    However, Olasanoye lamented that organisations are not keeping to the rules, as outsourced staff remain in the same position for years, and sometimes, sacked without due consultation. She accused the Ministry of Labour and Employment of not enforcing compliance among companies, stating that the Ministry needs to encourage more inspectors to go out and look at the conditions that casual workers are being exposed to.

    The ASSBIFI national president, however, said the Association sent a lot of proposals to the National Assembly, drawing its attention to the negative effects of casualisation in the financial sector, but the Association is yet to get a feedback on those proposals

    Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) General-Secretary, Mr Lumumba Okugbawa, is no less worried by banks’ preference for contract staffing. Describing casualisation as “a cankerworm that has eaten deep into the fabrics of our industry in particular”, he said most companies’ management keyed into this option to short-change the average worker in order to maximise profit.

    The PENGASSAN scribe also accused banks and other orgnaisations engaged in contract staffing, of denying employees their right to be organised. “We agree that there are short-term jobs like three to  six months, but keeping a worker for up to 15 years as a casual worker is nothing short of slavery and should be condemned in its entirety.

    “We, therefore, call for a strengthening of our relevant laws to discourage this menace. In some climes, due to the short period and fixed term of their contract, these categories of workers even earn more than the so-called permanent or regular workers. The struggle is still on to discourage this practice. Casual or contract workers have no legal protection,” he told The Nation.

    Also speaking on evils of casualisation, Mr. Femi Aborishade, an Ibadan-based legal practitioner and activist, said: “Casual employment refers to contracts of employment which are for a short duration. It is characterised by uncertainty, temporariness, flexibility, fluctuations in workload, and so on. Casualisation, as the phenomenon is often referred to, can take several forms and called by different nomenclatures, depending on the country and work enterprise.

    “It could be called casual labour, temporary staff, contract staff, outsourced labour (i.e. labour supplied by sub-contractors), on-call workers (called in to work only as and when they are needed), zero hours contracts (workers, who are not entitled to any minimum number of hours of work), undocumented labour, seasonal labour, and so on.”

    Aborishade emphasised that casual workers tend to be underpaid and are not entitled to any rights – no fringe benefits, transport, feeding, medical care allowances, no freedom of unionisation, no pension, no leave, and so on. He said in most cases, they are only paid for days worked regardless of sickness–induced absence from work.

    The activist said the policy is in practice, not only in the private sector, but also in the public sector. He added that unfortunately, there is no legal protection for the typical casual worker in Nigeria. “The Labour Act ought to be overhauled such that, in principle, labour casualisation is abolished or at least, properly regulated within the relevant standards established in International Labour Organisation (ILO) Conventions and Recommendations so that the casual worker is entitled to basic trade union rights,” he urged.

    Aborishade, therefore, called on the labour movement to put pressure on the Federal Government to ratify relevant ILO conventions. His words: “In the least, I recommend for Nigeria, the adoption of the Zimbabwean legal protection for the casual worker. In Zimbabwe, Section 12 (3) of the Labour Act provides protection for job security of casual workers.

    “Under this Section, casual workers are entitled to not being unfairly dismissed. Their dismissal can only be valid if substantive and procedural fairness are shown. Indeed, Section 12 (3) of the Labour Act provides that a casual contract (casual worker) shall be deemed to have been converted to a permanent contract (employee) where the employee works for an aggregate period of more than six weeks in any four consecutive months.”

    Aborishade said although, he commends the Zimbabwean legal provision on conversion from casual to permanent worker status, and recommends it for adoption in Nigeria, he generally believes that the upsurge in precarious employment is the fallout of globalisation, but its practice in Nigeria is nothing but industrial slavery.

     

    Contract staff lament

    Mr. Segun Olaoye said contract staff in banks are really poorly treated. “I even have a friend who works for a new generation bank who told me that he is really finding it tough as a contract staff, but has no choice due to lack of jobs in Nigeria. He complains of the very little salary he collects, which is about N70, 000 and works from morning till around 9pm,” he narrated.

    Busola Olaoke, who has also been working in a bank as a contract employee for the past four years, told The Nation that she is now getting apprehensive about what the future holds for her. She said she does not know if her contract with the bank will be renewed or not, and even if the contract is renewed, her salary will not be better than what it is in any case.

    However, Olaoke is not alone in her predicament. Seun Alabi, another contract staff, said she  has struggled endlessly to ensure that her employer converts her employment to a permanent one. She, however, expressed regrets that her aspiration seems to be a mirage. To make matters worse, she said the bank often threatens its entire contract staff with termination of appointment at any given opportunity.

    While Alabi and her colleagues are quite eager to secure good jobs with better conditions elsewhere, the snag, however, is that such jobs may not be within their reach, a situation that has compelled them to make do with their current occupation where the working conditions are unpalatable.

    The Nation learnt that the sad stories of Olaoke and Alabi mirror the situation in most organisations, particularly banks where contract staff engagement has become the order of the day. Although, the practice abounds virtually in all the sectors, including manufacturing, oil and gas, the banking industry appears to be more pronounced.

    The reason for this is not far-fetched. Since mid-June 2014 when the country’s economy was hit by a debilitating recession caused by the crash in oil price, down to the end of 2017 when the economy started recovering, the fortunes of banks have dipped.

    The economic recession was said to have hit most banks on several fronts, ranging from a record high bad loan (non-performing loans) to a decline in income. In view of the dwindling revenue and the impact of bad loans, most of the banks resorted to cost-cutting measures, including outright staff retrenchment and contract staffing.

    The Nation learnt that the engagement of contract staff is common mainly among the top tier banks, some of who may have just two full staff in a branch. Some of the contract staff who spoke with The Nation, lamented the outrageous targets given to them to sustain their contract.

     

    Can govt rein in the monster?

    President Muhammadu Buhari had, at the last Centenary International Labour Conference (ILC) in Geneva, told a gathering of world leaders, employers and workers representatives that casualisation of workers in any form was no longer in practice in Nigeria.

    This was even as he said labour should be the centre piece of economic and social policies for building a just, fair, equitable and egalitarian society in the future.

    Towards realising this, Buhari said the Nigerian government has inaugurated and launched the 2017-2020 Federal Civil Service Strategy and Implementation Plan for the purpose of improving and developing capacity in the public sector to advance the nation’s economy.

    The Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Labour and Employment, Mr. Williams Alao, who spoke on behalf of President Buhari and Nigeria, as head of the Nigerian delegation to this year’s ILO Centenary session, said Nigeria as a country has already barred casualisation.

    He said the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment had issued several circulars banning casualisation in Nigeria, adding that casualisation was not acceptable in the country.

    He said the Federal Government will no longer tolerate casualisation in the nation’s world of work. “I am pleased to inform this august gathering that Nigeria is one of the countries that has convened a National Dialogue on the Future of Work and is implementing many of the initiatives as well as the recommendations of our National Dialogue.

    “We agree with the ILO that labour, being the most critical factor of production, should be the fulcrum of economic and social policies if we are to have a just, fair, equitable and egalitarian society in the future.”

    He pointed out that, there is presently a concerted effort to create an efficient, productive, incorruptible and citizen-centred work force, anchored on four pillars of professionalism, enterprise, content management system, entrepreneurship culture and enhanced welfare package for employees.

    While these are no doubt cheery news for Nigerians caught in the web of casualisation across the sectors, the Federal Government’s claims that it has outlawed the practice is clearly at variance with the reality on ground. This is so particularly in the banking industry where the practice has continued to thrive.

    However, going by the tough stance of the labour movement and other concerned stakeholders against the practice, it’s probably safe to say that the issue will continue to pitch orgnaised labour against employers on one hand, and the government on the other hand, until it is addressed.

  • Xenophobia: NANS wants Nigeria, South Africa leaders to intervene

    The National Association of Nigeria Students (NANS), has implored the President of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari and his South African counterpart, Cyril Ramaphosa, to  intervene toward ending xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa.

    Mr Adeyemi Azeez, national Public Relations Officer (PRO), of the association, made the suggestion in a statement made available to newsmen in Abuja on Sunday.

    Azeez said that for South Africa businesses to thrive in Nigeria, the problems of xenophobic attacks must first be dealt with.

    According to him, NANS believes it is imperative for the two leaders to meet urgently and address the issue.

    “Nigerian students, as intellectuals, believe that the best approach to the problem is to address the root/origin/bases of the problem; once the foundation of a problem is addressed, the problem becomes basically solved.

    Read Also: Students shutdown South Africa’s Shoprite in Ogun over Xenophobia

    “Our resolve is that businesses of South Africans will only thrive in Nigeria if we put an end to Xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa.

    “NANS leadership has determinedly  resolved not to relent in championing an infinite struggle against South African bussinesses in Nigeria, as long as Xenophobic attacks on Nigerians by South Africans continues.

    ” NANS calls on the two leaders to address the issue of Xenophobic attacks as that of an outbreak of EBOLA or any other deadly disease.”

    Azeez described the proposed meeting of the two president in October as a welcome development, but added that the time frame for the meeting was too long owing to the urgency of the matter.

    He said that the association would therefore want the two presidents to, as a matter of urgency, reschedule the meeting to a closer date, preferably in the next seven days.

    (NAN)