The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has insisted on capital punishment for corrupt public office holders in the country.
The labour union said it is opposed to life imprisonment for treasury looters, adding that the country is not ripe for that.
NLC President, Comrade Ayuba Wabba spoke with reporters in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital on Saturday during his condolence visit to former NLC vice president, Issa Aremu on the death of her mother, Hafsat.
“For us change means food on the table of the ordinary Nigerian person and not money in the pocket of few. Today many people are living below $1 per day and over 70 per cent of Nigeria are living like that. Change means changing this equation where there will be food in the table of all Nigerians; where our children can go to public schools.
” Most of the people in authority went to public schools. What we are saying in essence is that we must canvass for positive change.
“We must canvass for capital punishment. It is only people who are stealing that will go against it. If we are campaigning for capital punishment and people are kicking against it, we must be consistent because people are reaping from where they have not sown. Except we begin to do the needful, it will be difficult to change our society.
“If you have followed up our argument, we have said clearly that part of why we are in this quagmire of challenges is that a lot of people have appropriated the resources that we need to drive development,” the NLC President stated.
Tag: NLC
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NLC insists on capital punishment for treasury looters
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NLC, Onu: we’re on recovery path
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) yesterday called for the diversification of the nation’s economy.
A national leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Ogbonnaya Onu, expressed optimism that Nigeria would be great again.
In their separate messages, NLC President Ayuba Wabba and Onu praised the recovery steps taken by President Muhammadu Buhari.
Wabba said: “Eid-el-Kabir represents unconditional obedience to our creator, sacrifice, adherence to higher moral values and show of love to friends and families through sharing.
“The occasion affords us an opportunity to reconcile with God, re-assess our personal and official lives and how these impact on the nation.
“It similarly avails us a great chance to renew our commitment to the Nigerian project by fighting the vices bedevilling it.”
Onu said: “On this important occasion of Eid-el-Kabir, I urge all Nigerians to rededicate themselves to the worthy attributes of love of country and faith in our collective ability to build a new, united and prosperous Nigeria.
“Nigeria is destined for greatness. I urge that we utilise the opportunity of this solemn occasion to rededicate ourselves to those worthy attributes that will help make this possible.”
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NLC: She was a virtuous woman
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said yesterday that the late Mrs. HID Awolowo represented a generation of virtuous women, untainted by power or wealth.
Its President, Ayuba Wabba, said in a statement yesterday that this quality gave her the moral authority she had to manage things even in difficult times.
The statement reads: “Mrs. Awolowo’s death represents the end of a great era in Nigerian history. Mama Awolowo was not just a wife to one of Nigeria’s founding fathers; she was part of that epic struggle that ushered in our independence.
“Mama was in the trenches with her husband and Nigerians, offering in the process wifely and maternal defences when they were most needed.
“Mama Awolowo was a remarkable woman, a woman of character and faith in God, principles that stood her in good stead during trials and tribulations, especially during the incarceration of her husband, loss of her children and husband.
“Mama Awolowo represented that generation of virtuous women, untainted by power or wealth and accordingly, wielded such moral authority that she had no difficulty in managing the Awolowo Family and overseeing the Awolowo political clan after her husband’s death.
“As the nation mourns this titan, our prayer is that may the principles for which she fought and died be not in vain. Our hearts go to the family and friends. May her soul rest in peace.”
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Tariff hike: NLC, CNPP, consumers plot against NERC, operators
The plans to review electricity tariff has provoked customers of the distribution companies. The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), the Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP) and others are angry. The consumers warn against a price hike in the face of a metering deficit, low investments in infrastructure and lingering insufficient supply. JOHN OFIKHENUA, reports.
Should the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the Presidency approve the new tariffs being proposed by the Electricity Distribution Companies (DISCOS) and Generation Companies (GENCOS), two options will be opened to customers – to pay and depend on the firms for the utility or, find alternative power source.
If the plans are anything to go by, customers of the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) will record 25 per increase, Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) will have to contend with 21 per cent hike, Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IEDC) have a marginal 1.76 per cent increase to cope with. The Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC) have 19.25per cent rise to bear. The commission’s Principal Manager, Market Competition and Rates, Aisha Mahmud, dropped the hint at a presentation to stakeholders in the sector, including the generating and distribution companies, of the Consumer Forum and others last Tuesday at Abuja. There was no information yet on what customers of Port Harcourt, Ikeja, Eko and other companies will paying at the frozen point to allow a comparative analysis of their new tariffs.
The upward review in tariff is coming with some contrasts that could confuse analysts to simply admit that NERC is doing electricity consumers the favour of reducing the tariff. Truly, the commission had last year frozen the tariff at a period that the customers were expected to pay more for electricity following its bi-annual minor review. The Federal Government suspended the implementation of the said tariff increases that would have been effective from July, barely two months into President Muhammadu Buhari’s presidency.
NERC tinkers with tariff
But, today, NERC is reviewing the tariff in accordance with its order. The baseline for the new review is April 30, when power supply achieved marginal increase over the output recorded in the last review that was not implemented.
Following the surge in power supply in the period under review, the average cost of electricity fell, necessitating customers to pay less. Although the tariff will be lower than the one that was not implemented, it is still higher than what it was when it was frozen last year – the price that is still effective. That the new tariff will be effective retroactively from July this year shows that the customers would pay arrears from July.
In his opening remarks at the stakeholders’ consultation forum, NERC chairman Sam Amadi noted that the public hearing was for a minor review of the few indicators that the electricity market had to track. Dr. Amadi exonerated the commission from the outcome of the review which he attributed to economic fundamentals.
He said: “Our job is to track them; we don’t manufacture them; we don’t create them, but we track them to ensure that they are actually reflected in the modem. We retrieve them from the official sources that are authorised by law. So, whatever you see here know that we traced the macroeconomic data as they develop over the months and feed them into our formula so that the outcome will be clear to all. The chairman urged the consumers on active participation since the burden will always fall on them. Amadi asked the advocacy network to help mobilise consumers for participation in the public hearing.
Taking the stakeholders through the procedures and variables the NERC adopted for the review, Mahmud insisted that Section 76(8) of the Electric Power Sector Reform Act conferred the powers for adoption of a tariff methodology, the Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO).
The MYTO, according to her, provides a 15-year tariff path for the electricity industry, with minor reviews bi-annually in the light of changes in a limited number of parameters (such as inflation, exchange rate, gas prices, and generation capacity) and major reviews every five years, when all the inputs are reviewed with the stakeholders.
But, for this ongoing bi-annual review, Mahmud stressed that NERC obtained the data on the official rate of inflation and exchange rate for the period ending April 30, 2015, from the website of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). It also requested information on generation capacity as at April 30 from the System Operator (SO) of the Transition Company of Nigeria (TCN) and also studied the daily generation report of the SO. The commission requested for information from the Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trader (NBET) on tested capacity for all generators.
The inflation rate that NERC received from the CBN, said Mahmud, shows a figure of 8.3 per cent as at April 30, but MYTO2 had an assumption of 13 per cent inflation rate. Subsequently, after the 2014 minor review, the inflation rate was reviewed down to 7.8 per cent.
On exchange rate, she said that the data from the apex bank website shows an exchange rate of N197 to $1 as at April 30. MYTO-2 was benchmarked at the N178 to $1, noting that MYTO-2 also allows a charge of one per cent above the CBN rate to cover Letter of Credit and other bank charges. She said that the adopted exchange rate for the review was therefore CBN’s exchange rate +1 per cent which equals 198.97.
Mahmud explained that gas prices had been regulated since the adoption of the MYTO in 2008 and the regulated prices were applied in the 2012-2016 price regime. She added that the Federal Ministries of Petroleum Resources, Power, the CBN and NERC reached an understanding in August last year on a gas price of $2.50/mmbtu and transport cost of $0.80/mmbtu. There was a decision that the gas transportation cost of $0.30 should remain until the GENCOS prove otherwise like the Geregu Power Plc., which stated in its gas transportation agreement with $.75.
In terms of generation capacity, she noted that the system operator’s daily report was used to derive the data which the commission adopted for the minor review. She said that the average peak capacity is 3,832MW while average power sent out capacity is 3,404MW.
On the whole, a summary of the result of the minor review shows that inflation was 7.8 per cent when it was last amended in 2014. But, it hit 8.9 per cent in April 2015. Exchange rate that was N166.18 when it was last amended last year, soared to N198.97 in April. Gas price/mmbtu which was $2.80 during the last review in 2014 rose to $2.80 in April this year. Energy sent out from transmission stations that were 28,038Giga Watts/Hour (GW/h last year, increased to 32,921GWh in April 2014. The revenue requirement which was N572 billion during the last review surged to N619 billion April this year. Average retail tariff that was N26.2 in the last review dipped to N23.8 this April.
Consequent upon the following parameters, NERC proposed that customers of the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company will pay N18.41 as against the N14.70 they paying prior to the review. Had the commission implemented the tariff last year, they would have paid N19.96.
Enugu Electricity Distribution Company that froze R2 N16.44 will pay N19.61 in the new tariff but it ought to have paid N20.89 had NERC implemented the last tariff.
Benin Electricity Distribution Company that its R2 customers were paying N14.82 when the tariff was frozen will now pay N17.94 instead of N18.46.
Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company that its R2 customers were paying N16.44 before it was frozen will now pay N16.73 instead of N18.00.
The presentation was, however, silent on what other distribution companies such as Jos, Yola, Port Hacourt, Eko, Ikeja and others were paying before their tariffs were frozen to allow a comparative analysis. NERC is now taking advantage of the differences between what customers would have paid last year had it implemented the last tariff and the proposed tariff which is relatively low to announce that it has reduced tariff. The same NERC seems to be reticent on the fact that the customers will now not only pay higher, but also pay the arrears of the increase with effect from July.
The NERC’s position
Rising from the meeting, reporters asked Amadi to justify the increase and the chairman said: “You made a good point, it was frozen. What that means is that we did the analysis the other time, but going by the low level of metering, going by the power supply, the DISCOS could forebear. We told them that they are entitled to this tariff, but we are asking you not to collect it at this stage until you improve.”
Many DISCOS, according to him, did not take the intervention in good fate even as it was clear that it was the global practice that regulators could freeze the market in view of some socio-economic factors.
Amadi stressed that it would have been completely irresponsible of the commission to approve a tariff hike when a new adminstration was just assuming office in June this year. But now, the stage is set for increase because the electricity market is stable and needs to move on.
He said: “Now, the order said six months. It will be unfrozen in June. June came and I told you why it wasn’t done: because a new government just took over on the 1st of June and that will be totally irresponsible to unlock tariff at that stage. Now that we have some stability we need to move to the next stage. And so, we have now shown what that should be. This is a formula. It has not yet translated to anybody’s tariff. What the DISCOS will now do is to take this short-fall. I will show you the new tariff, to see the short-fall. They will put it into their modem and control it for 10 years.”
Unlike the combative usual representatives of the distribution and generation companies at previous NERC public hearings for tariff review, the meeting penultimate Tuesday was very cordial. It was like an adoption of minutes of a previously held meeting because the review serves the interest of the operators.
Speaking, the Executive Director, Regulation, Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) , Abimbola Odubiyi, drew attention to the fact that “NBET has already activated the PPA for Olurunsogo and Omotosho, which they are giving us currently . And that is not reflected in the tariff.”
He overlooked the hike as it has favoured his company.
Representative of the Geregu Power Plc., Adebiyi Adenuga, urged the commission to consider the fact that all their commitments are in naira which the exchange rate has affected adversely. He asked the NERC to allow the tariff to address the firm’s loses in the past for the period of arrears the retroactivity of the tariff will cover.
However, some of the consumers at the meeting complained that the distribution companies take advantage of the metering deficit in the market to charge them even when there is little or no power supply.
Speaking, the Mr. Oboma Ekoh of Nigeria Electricity Consumer Advocacy Network (NECAN), noted: “Abuja Electricity Distribution Company is shortchanging consumers particularly in the rural areas. For instance, your tariff before this time was N14.70. And you go to the rural areas in place of R2 you give them C1, you give them A1. I am so sorry I will present you with bills because we have been conducting a research on this. I have collected samples of bills and there is a particular location in Abuja for which I have about 12 bills. In the R2 you collected N248 kilowatts per hour per month. And you billed at N14.70. You go back to people who have not had electricity for an upward of eight months since January and you billed them N4, 000 and you gave them 415kilo watts per hour. The next month you billed them 475 kilo watts per hour. The next month 466, the next month 415. And these billings, within this period there was no light. There was no distribution transformer in those areas. Now, listen to what you people do in the field. They give you a bill of N30, 000 and ask you how much you are going to pay. You tell them instead of N30,000 you have to pay N10,000. What are the parameters?
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NLC to partner ICPC on monitoring of bailout cash
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has said it will partner with the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) to monitor the disbursement and use of the N338billion bailout funds released to about 27 states of the federation by the Federal Government.
The President of the NLC, Comrade Ayuba Wabba, said in a statement made available to The Nation in Abuja that it has directed all states councils in the benefiting states to serve as whistle blowers on any criminal diversion of the bailout funds.
The congress commended the ICPC for ensuring the return of about N1 billion being public funds criminally diverted by some corrupt officials of the Federal Ministry of Environment and the Federal Pay Office.
Wabba said NLC was in agreement with the commission that the painful days of the public “running after funds after appropriation” are over for the good of all Nigerians including workers.
The 27 states that benefited from the bailout funds are – Abia (N14.152b), Adamawa (N2.378b), Bauchi (N8.60b), Bayelsa (N1.285b), Benue (N28.013b), Borno (N7.680b), Cross River (N7.856b), Delta (N10.036b), Ebonyi (N4.063b), Edo (N3.167b), Ekiti (N9.604b) and Enugu (N4.207b).
Others are – Gombe (N16.459b) , Imo (N26.806b), Kastina (N3.304b), Kebbi (N0.690b), Kogi (N50.842b), Kwara (N4.320b), Nasarawa (N8.317b ), Niger (N4.306b), Ogun (N20.00b), Ondo (N14.686b), Osun(N34.988b), Oyo( N26.606b ), Plateau (N5.357b), Sokoto (N10.093b) and Zamfara (N10.020b).
While saluting the renewed effort and commitment of ICPC to recover looted public funds and other proceeds of corruption, the NLC President said in doing so, ICPC is commendably living up to its Mission Statement which is “To rid Nigeria of corruption through lawful enforcement and preventive measures.”
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Our Girls; PMB: Farmland is not ‘No Man’s Land’, NLC; ‘aguntasolo.com’; Roads or ‘Nigeria Airways
Our Girls are still missing since April 15 2014. The military coalition is making progress. If done three years ago, we would never have had 20,000+ murdered and four million unhappy and often helpless ‘Internally Displaced Persons’. We must add as a cause of IDPs, the over 20,000 killed in the 20 year+ lethal Fulani herdsmen vs farmers war. Why do the herdsmen see farm land as ‘Federal No Man’s Land’ with ‘free’ cattle fodder, with no compensation offered? Is this a thinly disguised attempt to redress past failed ‘conquest and humiliate’ strategies? President Buhari must stop this war. The recent marches in Plateau and Nassarawa states where I did my NYSC in 1975/6 in Jos and Lafia leave me cold at the crimes committed. It is so easy to kill in Nigeria and we are so easy to kill. Just call yourself a ‘militia’ and you can kill at will. When Boko Haram is curbed, the same military is required for the Fulani herdsmen/farmers war, and the soldiers must ensure ‘‘Freedom and Security for Farmers in the ‘Front Line States’ ‘’.
Happily the Third War in Nigeria, The Anti-Corruption War, is active at federal Level. All thieves must return amounts stolen and be imprisoned in proportion. A financial crime is as deadly as a violent crime. A crime is criminal, period! The term ‘Financial Crime’ must not make the crime ‘less criminal’, than the crime of an armed robber. It is not okay to commit a ‘financial crime’. Even law enforcement agencies ‘cooperate’ by charging such criminals with ‘MONEY LAUNDERING’ which has a MAXIMUM JAIL TERM OF JUST TWO YEARS, no matter the amount involved- N100,000 or N27billion! This is a legal scam law to deceive Nigerians that justice is occurring when it is criminal unwritten ‘plea bargaining’.
For the anti-corruption war to work, it requires to progress from federal command and control for spread Buhari-ism to all states and LGAs for ‘national spread and federal character’ of anti-corruption. The NLC-led nationwide anti-corruption war march is not politics. The NLC and Co must practicalise things to guarantee the anti-corruption war’s success. The worker and the family will benefit from ‘Zero Corruption’. Every kobo stolen is stolen from people programmes aimed at making Nigerians own Nigeria, be they workers, children or retired. The NLC should produce ‘Anti-Corruption Ways and Means Guidelines’ and strategise to confront their own internal and also external corruption. The NLC and others must harness ‘useful Anti-Corruption information’. WHISTLE BLOWING MUST BECOME A RESPECTABLE PROFESSION with a Honours List and Role Model Status in Nigeria and Annual Whistleblowers Awards.
The migration and trafficking nightmare are a sobering lesson for Africa’s corruption-prone leaders and thieves from public coffers. Under the uninspiring engine-rooms of corruption – the regimes of Babangida, Abacha, Abdusalami and Obasanjo – many Nigerians emigrated or were forced by circumstance to flee to Europe for normal work and even prostitution or died of thirst in the Sahara or drowned in the Mediterranean. The media should ban them and stop reporting every antic and word of these Ex-Presidents – a daily insult to Nigerians living in darkness. They richly deserve the Buhari anti-corruption treatment,
The national anti-corruption project must be disseminated and domesticated nationwide in every village and by all organisations, societies, groups, forces and services. Let every honest Nigerian contribute to this anti-corruption war from Boy Scouts to PTAs. Every Nigerian will benefit from a bribe-free society. Bribery can be stopped immediately, overnight.
Every Nigerian has experienced the corruption of the Nigerian uniform. President Buhari has an enormous task but in reality, it is easily achieved by delegation of authority and ready recourse to ‘termination of appointment (TOA) and ‘Pre-Signed Letters of Resignation’ from his management team. He can reverse this ugly but permanent stain on Nigeria’s flag by giving each ‘Head of Uniform and Organisation’ an ultimatum- a ‘Priority 1 Internal Anti-Corruption Drive’. ‘Stop Corruption Top To Bottom Immediately Today Or Face Sack in one month’. Give them one month to bring corruption to a halt. Invite the public to report to a ‘Corruption Monitor’ database. A monthly meeting thereafter will keep everyone on their toes and create the ‘ZERO CORRUPTION MODEL’. The Customs, Police, security agencies, VIO, FRSC, LGA road officials, SON, NAFDAC, judges, magistrates, greedy tax consultants and exorbitant levy imposers, road maintenance agencies, ministry officials, professionals, electricity [non]suppliers all on the long ‘accused of corruption’ list! They all need to be ‘under surveillance’ by anti-corruption citizens. By the time Buhari has ‘accepted’ the resignation of three or four successive IGPs, SON or NAFDAC bosses in three months, the police will fall in line from Constable to Commissioner as will the others.
President Buhari should add ‘aguntasolo.com’ to his reading list. I agree that the national carrier idea is strictly about pride and to be avoided like a plague in Nigeria’s weak economy. The New Nigeria Airways will cost us dearly but profit only 0.1% of Nigerians. Instead, that money could build many railways, 100 bridges and 500 roads used by 100% of Nigerians. After killing corruption, Buhari must have a legacy and plan to be more than ‘Buhari- The Anti-Corruption Tsar’ but also ‘Buhari- The Great Road/Bridge Builder’. He must avoid becoming ‘Buhari – the failed New Nigerian Airways Man’. The Ibadan Lagos road is screaming to be completed. On Sunday afternoon September 13, it took seven hours to reach Lagos.
‘The national anti-corruption project must be disseminated and domesticated nationwide in every village and by all organisations, societies, groups, forces and services. Let every honest Nigerian contribute to this anti-corruption war from Boy Scouts to PTAs’
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Photo: NLC supports Buhari’s fight against corruption
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NLC, TUC march against corruption in Abuja
Organised labour in the country, made up of the affiliate unions of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) practically shut down the nation’s capital for about five hours on Thursday when they marched on the streets of Abuja in support of the anti corruption crusade of President Muhammadu Buhari.
There was however a mild drama at the first gate to the National Assembly as security agents stationed there locked the gates, preventing labour and civil society organisations from gaining access the Assembly to deliver their protest letters.
The angry workers who were kept at the first gate to the National Assembly for about 10 minutes threatened to pull down the gates if they are not allowed access into the National Assembly.
They were eventually allowed access when it was obvious that they were ready to pull down the gates.
The workers and civil society organisations who began their match at the Unity Fountain took the campaign to the headquarters of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the National Assembly and the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, chanting solidarity songs and carrying placards with various inscriptions.
Some of the placards read: “Payment of workers’ salaries is non –negotiable,” “Stop corruption, Nigeria can create million of jobs alone in agriculture,” “Invest in agriculture today, corruption had damaged our communication sector,” “Stop it, recover our monies in the hands of past leaders now,” “Corruption has increased poverty, fight it now,” and “If we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill us,” among others.
Addressing the workers, the SGF, David Babachir Lawal, commend labour for supporting the Buhari’s administration in its quest to make corruption a thing of the past in the country, assuring that the government will not fail Nigerians in the fight against corruption.
The SGF said the Buhari government considers organised labour as partners in the development of the country and not enemies, pointing out that with the workers supporting the government fight against corruption, the fight is almost won.
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We’ll unite, reconcile all factions in NLC – Wabba
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Thursday in Abuja expressed commitment to reconciling and uniting all the factions in its rank.
The President of the congress, Dr Ayuba Wabba, expressed the commitment at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Forum.
He said that the splinter groups within the union had created unavoidable challenges for the leaders, hence the need for reconciliation and unity.
According to him;“It is true that we had challenges after our conference but it is usual in every system because the road is not also limited to NLC.
“Every system and every organisation in our country also have had its own share of the challenge.
“So, part of the challenge is what our colleague did, saying that they don’t agree with the outcome and instead of also following the process through the normal channel of either arbitration or resorting to normal processes, they then went to declare themselves.
“Certainly two wrongs do not make a right and we don’t lament over that; they are our colleagues and we have made every efforts to try to bring them in, including the efforts made by our veterans.
“All of them have been on the issue of reconciliation and we are committed to that, but it takes also two to tango.
“While we have been able to forfeit all our own commitment in trying to accommodate our colleagues and ensuring also that we have a very strong united NLC, despite of our strength.
“Even if it’s one person that has deviated, we are trying our effort to bring them in but that will not also water down our engagement, we will be focused, we will be committed.
“Our work will also speak for us. “
He said that the NLC leadership would always represent the interest of workers and initiate policies and programmes that will promote good governance.
Wabba said that though NLC was passing through a rough patch at the moment, it would emerge stronger, united and better focused.
He said that the International Labour Organisation (ILO) was against child labour and the casualisation of labour.
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Ebonyi NLC rejects salary structure
The Organised Labour in Ebonyi State has rejected the recommendations of the committee set up to look into the impasse between it and the government on the salary structure.
Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Chairman Comrade Ike Nwafor made labour’s position known after the committee presented its report to Governor Dave Umahi.
He said the workers would resist any deviation from the present salary structure implemented by former Governor Martin Elechi.
Presenting the report to Umahi at the Government House in Abakaliki, Chairman, Sam Egwu said the committee interacted with the government and labour representatives and received submissions from both.
He said the committee noticed discrepancies in the salary table as both government and labour paraded different charts.
“The committee noticed too, the reality of low Federal Allocation due to the falling cost of oil and the poor Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).
“Considering the economic challenges and inflation of the time, the committee recommends that workers’ salaries be increased based on the old table”, he said.
He explained that the present salary table was faulty due to the arbitrary percentage increment in the grade levels and steps.
The committee recommended that two months be given to the parties to work out an acceptable salary structure since labour refused the old chart.
Egwu urged the government to improve the IGR by seeking ways of diversifying the economy.
Governor Umahi hailed the committee for a good job and ordered the payment of July and August salaries.
But Comrade Nwafor said the organised labour was not part of the report and that workers would not accept the old salary structure.
His words: “For former governor, Sam Egwu and Rev. Fr Sam Egwu (secretary of the committee) to have submitted such a report, and claim that we are part of it, even when we didn’t know where or when thy drafted it, is disappointing.
“We are not signatories to it, we are not privy to it, and we were never part of that report. They only said what thy felt. We advise that government should not pay workers any salary that is not according to the approved circular.
“The government had approved a circular for the salary, and that circular went through collective bargaining and was approved; anything other than that is not acceptable to us”.
