Tag: ultimatum

  • Neconde: SAN faults seven-day ultimatum

    Neconde: SAN faults seven-day ultimatum

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Uchechukwu Val Obi, has faulted the seven-day ultimatum given by Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) to the Federal Government to direct Neconde Energy Limited to recall its sacked employees or risk an industrial action.

    Obi, who is the counsel to Neconde Energy Limited, argued that PENGASAN’s ultimatum was made in bad faith and with a view to overreaching the pending proceedings at the National Industrial Court.

    He recalled that in the Suit Number NICN/LA/268/2017 between Neconde Energy Limited & Anor. Vs. PENGASSAN & Ors,  Justice O. A. Obaseki-Osaghae on June 5 ordered “that none of the parties should take any action that will lead to a break down in law and order pending the hearing and determination of the Motion on Notice.”

    In a letter dated December 8, 2017 and addressed to Comrades Francis Johnson, Lumumba I. Okugbara and Abel Agar – President, General Secretary and Zonal Chairman, Obi, who is the Managing Partner of Alliance Law Firm, reminded the union leaders that disputes involving Neconde and its staff members affiliated to PENGASSAN had received the best consideration of Neconde leading to a binding communiqué signed between Neconde and PENGASSAN in May.

    The senior lawyer also informed the PENGASSAN leadership that Neconde had fully complied with the terms of the communique.

    He reminded the union leaders of their December 7 letter addressed to “All NEC Members” of PENGASAN in which the union gave a seven-day ultimatum to the federal government and relevant agencies, of the association’s intention to embark on a nationwide strike effective December 18, 2017 should they fail to direct Neconde to recall its sacked employees.

    Obi reminded the union that the right of Neconde, as an employer of labour to hire and fire personnel is within its legal rights as aptly pronounced by the “Supreme Court in the case of Chukwumah Vs. Shell Petroleum Development Corporation (1993) 4 NWLR (Pt. 289) where the apex Court held that an employer has the right to terminate its employee’s employment for good reason, bad reason or no reason at all”.

    According to Neconde’s counsel, this prerogative of the management was expressly preserved in the communiqué aforesaid. He said that the company had made it clear that it properly disengaged the affected staff and paid due entitlements.

    “When PENGASSAN and some of its members had continued to issue fresh threats despite its execution of the communiqué, Neconde had instituted a case at the National Industrial Court, namely Suit No. NICN/LA/268/2017 between Neconde Energy Limited & Anor. Vs. PENGASSAN & Ors seeking declaratory and injunctive reliefs et al,” Obi said.

    He noted that on June 5, 2017 the National Industrial Court presided over by the Hon. Justice O. A. Obaseki-Osaghae upon hearing an application made orders that “All parties to maintain the status quo ante bellum”; and “that none of the Parties should take any action that will lead to break down in law and order pending the hearing and determination of the Motion on Notice. This Order has been served on PENGASSAN and it remains extant, binding, subsisting and enforceable to date”.

    Neconde’s counsel also argued that PENGASAN’s ultimatum to the federal government and its relevant agencies to direct or prevail on Neconde to accede to its request to recall the sacked staff is made in bad faith and with a view to overreaching the pending proceedings.

    The senior lawyer also described the threat by PENGASSAN to embark on a nationwide strike as an action that is capable of leading to a break down in law and order, which was expressly restrained by the binding order of the court.

    “Under a democratic setting, the Courts should be allowed to hear and determine parties’ conflicts and it must be seen as an affront to the Court’s constitutional powers for any litigant to resort to self-help or embark on acts capable of intimidating or undermining the constitutional adjudicatory powers of the Court. Neconde therefore views PENGASSAN’s ultimatum as a contempt of Court and would be taking necessary steps against PENGASSAN and its leadership seemingly behind this action,” Obi explained.

    According to him, the present ultimatum of PENGASSAN threatening a “nationwide strike” should the executive fail to interfere in a pending judicial proceeding exposes the weakness and ineptitude of the current PENGASSAN leadership who have resorted to unorthodox and undemocratic antics to trade unionism.

    “Ordinarily, a trade union such as PENGASSAN should be a firm adherent to the tenets of the rule of law. Neconde remains committed to a lawful mode of dispute resolution and is willing to continue its engagement with PENGASSAN and any other stakeholders within standard, lawful and conventional parameters but would not relinquish its legal and inherent rights as an employer, as presently sought by a self-seeking leadership of PENGASSAN or at all,” he added.

  • Reps give ultimatum to BoI chief over N11b loan

    Reps give ultimatum to BoI chief over N11b loan

    The House of Representatives has given the Managing Director, Bank of Industry (BoI), Olukayode Pitan 24 hours to appear before it.

    He has up to 11am today to appear before the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of the House over N11billion the bank has been unable to recover.

    In his place at the PAC meeting yesterday, was the bank’s Chief Financial Officer, Taiwo Kolawole, who said Pitan had to be at another previously scheduled meeting in Enugu.

    This angered the Kingsley Chinda-led  Committee that sent a reminder of its earlier invitation to Pitan on July 28, saying the MD’s attitude to the House was denigrating,

    Chinda said: “Over N8billion loan given out have not been recovered and the bank is not doing anything about it according to the query. The second query is on another N2billion unexplained expenditure.

    “Considering the enormity of the sum involved, over N11billion as contained in the query by the AuGF, and considering the fact that the MD has given more importance to a meeting with Enugu State government.

    “We are tempted to take action as appropriate but in the spirit of fair hearing, we want to give him another opportunity so that he can appear before us tomorrow,  Aug 18, 2017 by 11 am, failure of which we will order for his arrest.”

     

  • The NIN ultimatum

    •Has Federal Government finally woken up to the single database challenge?

    One of the greatest advantages of the digital age is that it has afforded man the added advantage of capturing citizens in databases. Every serious, upward-looking country or even company today has managed to build a single, all-encompassing database for its citizens, residents and employees. In fact, to run any country today without a comprehensive biometric data base would seem as primitive as doing so without a census.

    It must be valid to state that one of the major impediments to Nigeria’s development and growth is the inability to set up her social planning platforms since independence. For instance, Nigeria has not been able to conduct an acceptable population census since independence in 1960; she has depended on approximations and sometimes wild extrapolations which may be far removed from reality. This of course is inimical to socio-economic planning and growth.

    If an absence of accurate census figures can be regarded as Nigeria’s Achilles heel, the lack of a biometric database in this electronic age would be something close to living with a total power outage. Just like the census, the quest for a national identity scheme for the country and identification card and number for the citizenry also predates the independence. The Federal Government had made numerous attempts to capture her citizens in manageable data compartments in the last five decades or more without satisfactory results yet.

    This is why we think the ultimatum by government giving January 1, 2018, as deadline for Nigerians to obtain their National Identification Number (NIN) or forfeit the right to renew or acquire new international passport is a welcome move. The objective is not only to further drive national identity card initiative being currently handled by the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) but to actualise the migration to a single database status.

    The Comptroller-General of Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), Mohammed Babadede, had disclosed the new directive last week after a meeting of the Database Harmonisation Committee of the Federal Government. Even foreigners are not exempt from the NIN deadline as they would not be able to renew residence permits after due date. It is also expected that various databases littering the electronic landscape will be collapsed into one national database by that target date.

    It is a tough task indeed and we hope that the government would meet her own target. So far, the NIMC has only managed to capture about 20 million Nigerians and about 180 million will be expected in the central database in three years, it is stated.

    Currently, there are over a dozen electronic platforms capturing biometric data of citizens; there is the Permanent Voters’ Registration card by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC); the Bank Verification Number by the Central Bank of Nigeria; SIM card registration; birth registration; drivers’ licence, to mention a few.

    The importance of a central database system in modern governance cannot be overemphasised: from an improved security tracking to traffic control, economic forecasting and budget planning. There are also financial transactions like banking, insurance and stock broking, among others.

    While every measure to enhance Nigeria’s crucial database is welcome, we urge the NIMC to raise its game and improve the speed of penetration. The rate of registration for a project that started effectively about six years ago is rather slow. Apart from further spreading registration points, there is need to increase awareness and publicity to lead Nigerians to the registration points.

    It is our prayer that a journey which started in 1963, through 1979 to 2004 and finally 2013 would eventually come to a fruitful ending as so much resources and sweat have been invested in forging a viable national database over the decades.

     

  • Delta communities give oil firm ultimatum

    A forum of host communities of OML 42 in Warri South-West Council Area of Delta State have given Neconde Energy Limited a 21-day ultimatum to address series of alleged violations or face a legal war.

    The host communities, at a news conference in Warri on Tuesday, also called for the revocation of the company’s mining licence.

    The chairman of Kokodiagbene community, Comrade Sheriff Mulade, accused the company, among other things, of reneging on a 5 per cent equity share agreement for host communities, denying host communities of job and contracts opportunities as well as failing to comply with international industry best practices in its operations in the area.

    “The treatment of host community contractors is so poor to the extent that the payments terms of Service Local Purchase Order are delayed, thereby making the host community contractors to incur undue overdraft charges which turn eat up the whole of their contract profits and huge parts of their project capital,” the forum said.

  • The papal ultimatum

    •Testy time for the Catholic Church as the Ahiara diocese in Imo provokes the Vatican

    Something believed to be unprecedented in the history of the Catholic Church may happen soon as the world counts down to a papal ultimatum handed down to a diocese of the church in Nigeria. In early June, Pope Francis issued an ultimatum to the Catholic leaders in Ahiara diocese to accept Bishop Peter Okpaleke or risk being sacked.

    The Catholic pontiff is finally taking this seemingly drastic step in a crisis that has lingered for nearly five years. In December 2012, Peter Ebere Okpaleke had been appointed bishop of the Ahiara diocese of Mbaise in Imo State, southeast of Nigeria. But both the body of the clergy and the laity of the diocese (at least a majority of them, it seems) had vehemently rejected the choice of the new bishop.

    Their grouse is that he hails from neighbouring Anambra State, also in the southeast of Nigeria and they argue that Mbaise land boasts of over 350 Catholic priests, dozens of them qualified to be elevated to the apogee of their Christian calling. They also suggest that the Anambra State Catholic family, the home of Francis Cardinal Arinze already has too many bishops. It is even suggested that the ascendance of Anambra priests may not be unconnected with what is considered the state’s overwhelming influence in the Vatican.

    The Catholic faithful of Ahiara have therefore remained adamant and indeed heedless on this matter; refusing to shift grounds and would not even tolerate stand-in bishops posted by the Vatican to hold forth and conduct essential services during the interregnum. It is indeed troubling that this nature of dissension and in fact resentment would manifest in the house of God and among the family of Christ. Even carnal politics don’t get this protracted and base.

    The situation gets more baffling when it is understood that appointment of bishops in the Catholic Church is strictly the prerogative of the pope. The Code of Canon Law which governs the Catholic Church is unequivocal about this; it says that: “The Supreme Pontiff freely appoints bishops or confirms those legitimately elected.

    And to aid the pope in making the right choice in different countries, there are hierarchies in every country such as the Apostolic Nuncios, the Congregation of Bishops and the Congregation for the Propagation of Faith, among others.

    It is unlikely that the Catholic Church has witnessed this manner of division and unchristian-like behaviour in modern history of the church. Not from people who have pledged to the oaths of obedience, chastity and poverty. It must explain why Pope Francis uncharacteristically spat fire in what is clearly a drastic step. “He demanded that each priest in the diocese write to him before July 9, asking forgiveness and clearly manifest total obedience to the pope.

    “They must also accept the bishop chosen by Rome. If, within a month, each priest doesn’t do so, he will be ipso facto suspended, such as from the celebration of the sacraments, and he will lose his current office.”

    It had been reported that Pope Francis only stopped short of taking the extraordinary measure of suppressing (suspending) the entire diocese but for fear of hurting the rank-and-file of the faithful.

    We urge the priests and Catholic faithful of Ahiara diocese to do the right thing and listen to their spiritual head, the pope. What has happened in the last five years is odious enough and should not be allowed to escalate. This rather peculiar tiff has been the object of much negative reports and even scorn in the international media, especially in the last few days. It has brought much ridicule to Nigeria and indeed, the Igbo region.

    And the question abroad is: we thought Christianity was about evangelism and salvation; even politicians in their worldliness, do not pursue position and status in this do-or-die manner?

  • Oyo issues ultimatum to illegal structure owners

    The Oyo State government has given property developers a 30-day ultimatum to pull down illegal structures to avoid sanction.

    The government urged the residents to get building plan approvals, in line with the laws of the state and the Federation from building development bureau and its zonal offices.

    In a statement yesterday in Ibadan, the state capital, the Director General of the Bureau of Physical Planning and Development Control, Waheed Gbadamosi, said it was imperative for the residents to comply with requisite planning laws and building instructions to avert dangers.

    Gbadamosi said a government task force will soon begin the certification of approved building plans, adding that those who have obtained building approvals from other sources should re-present them for processing to get necessary approvals after paying planning fees.

    He said: “The Oyo State government frowns at the development of illegal structures. This is to give the developers of the illegal structures a 30-day ultimatum to pull them down.

     

     

  • Anti-labour practices: PENGASSAN issues 72 hours ultimatum to firm

    Anti-labour practices: PENGASSAN issues 72 hours ultimatum to firm

    Barely two weeks after the suspension of an industrial action embarked upon by Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) over anti-labour practices of the Neconde Energy Limited, the management has sacked workers who participated in the industrial action.

    The association, therefore, has issued a 72-hour ultimatum, starting from Tuesday to Neconde Management within which the five affected members be recalled to work or face monumental consequences as they may relate to the organisation and the oil and gas industry.

    According to PENGASSAN, this was a flagrant violation of the terms  of a communique signed on May 18,  between the two parties towards the suspension of the picketing of the company.

    In the communiqué which was signed by the representatives of the company led by its Company/Board Secretary, Mr. Val Uche-Obi, SAN, who signed on behalf of the Chairman Neconde Energy Limited- Dr. Ernest Azudialu, and the Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Frank Edozie, among others and PENGASSAN representatives led by Chairman, PENGASSAN Lagos Zone, Comrade Abel Agarin, among others, it was agreed that nobody will be victimised on the ground of the industrial action.

    The senior staff trade union said the company terminated the employment of five members on June 1, based on the industrial actions. It would be recalled that the recent industrial  action began on May 15,  with the picketing of the premises of Neconde simultaneously in Lagos and Warri.

    The catalogue of grievances that led to the industrial action include forceful restructuring (evidenced in realignment, grade categorisation and harmonisation of salary structure and downgrade of conditions of service/contractual terms of employment) of Neconde to other non E&P subsidiaries of the Obijackson Group, lack of evidence (TCC) of employee tax (PAYE)  remittance in Lagos and Delta states since 2012, non- payment of 2016 13th month, non-payment of field allowances since August 2016, forceful and immediate transfer of union members (including pregnant women) from Lagos to Warri office with no consideration of impact on families, non-payment of transfer allowances (two months after the forceful transfer), and non-payment of severance benefits.

  • ASUP issues three-week ultimatum on salary payment

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) has given the Federal Government a three-week ultimatum to address the shortfalls in personnel and other payments owed its members or face industrial action.

    President of the union, Comrade Usman Dutse, who made this known to newsmen, said the decision was based on the outcome of the union‘s National Executive Council (NEC) meeting at the Plateau State Polytechnic, Barkin Ladi.

    He urged President Muhammadu Buhari to direct governors to pay salaries owed its members without delay.

    Comrade Dutse mentioned Abia, Edo, Kogi, Benue, Ondo, Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Imo and Zamfara states  as those that have not paid  salaries and promotion arrears of polytechnic workers, despite bailout funds as well as the  Paris Club refunds at their disposal.

  • SON gives ultimatum to owners of LPG storage tanks

    SON gives ultimatum to owners of LPG storage tanks

    The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has given a two-week ultimatum to owners of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage tanks nationwide to begin the process of SON certification or have their facilities shut down.

    A statement from the office of the Director-General, Mr. Osita Aboloma, in Abuja, said SON has observed a sharp rise in the installation of LPG storage tanks in petrol filling stations across the country, many of which have been unable to provide evidence of SON certification of the vessels.

    Aboloma, therefore, directed SON state offices to intensify the surveillance of installed LPG storage tanks in their areas of coverage to ascertain those that have SON certification before installation as required by the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) regulation.

    He said imported and locally-made LPG storage tanks are required to undergo SON certification to ensure conformity to the requirements of Nigeria Industrial Standard (NIS) 419:2000, specification and testing of unfired pressure vessels for the storage of LPG and ASME Division 1 Section VIII.

    These, according to him, include safety and performance requirements.

    The SON boss said locally-manufactured vessels are required to undergo certification under the SON Mandatory Conformity Assessment Programme (MANCAP), while imported vessels are to undergo the off-shore Conformity Assessment Programme (SONCAP) certification.

    He appealed to the public to be vigilant and report any installation of LPG storage tanks in their vicinity to the nearest SON office for verification of compliance to standards in the interest of public safety.

  • FERMA gets ultimatum on contract defaulters

    FERMA gets ultimatum on contract defaulters

    The Presidency has given the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA) a 14-day ultimatum to compile and forward names of contract defaulters to the Office of the Special Assistant to the President on Prosecution.

    It directed that the list outlining the names of the defaulting contractors should be forwarded to the Special Assistants’ office for further action.

    A letter addressed to the Office of the Acting Managing Director of FERMA by the Special Assistant to the President on Prosecution, said any contractor found wanting would be prosecuted.

    The letter, dated March 22, also said the process would enable the government obtain necessary information to make the Federal Government pay contractors that had executed their projects but had not been fully paid.