Tag: workers

  • Workers’ salaries are our priority, says Dickson

    Workers’ salaries are our priority, says Dickson

    The Bayelsa State Government has said it has been paying its workers, despite the dwindling revenue allocations from the Federation Account.

    Governor Seriake Dickson was said to have given a directive that workers’ salaries should be paid first, after each monthly allocation, before settling other financial obligations.

    Information Commissioner Dauseye Kikile said the governor applied prudence, accountability and transparency to manage the state’s resources and ensured that workers were not short-changed.

    He said Dickson constituted a Financial Management Committee, chaired by Deputy Governor John Jonah, and mandated it to carry out monthly review of government’s financial obligations and ensure that the basic ones are fulfilled.

    Kikile said workers’ salaries were the first-line charge of the government, adding that other financial obligations, such as project execution, were secondary.

    He said: “It is our highest priority as a government. We don’t want to put the workers in a situation where they won’t be able to meet up with their family obligations.

    “So, we make salaries the first-line charge. What we do is that once we get our receipt from the Federation Account, after all necessary deductions, we then pay salaries. That is why we are witnessing a lull in our projects. It is a strategic management process put together by the governor.”

     

     

     

  • El-Rufai to fish out ghost workers

    El-Rufai to fish out ghost workers

    Kaduna State Governor Nasir Ahmed El-Rufai has concluded arrangements to fish out ghost workers this week.

    The government announced  at the weekend that it would begin biometric verification of civil servants from Wednesday.

    A statement by the Special Assistant to the Governor on Media and Publicity, Samuel Aruwan, said the exercise was designed to provide the government an accurate record of its workers and clean-up its payroll.

    The statement stressed that the data collected would enable the government to determine if the billions of naira spent monthly on salary were paid to identifiable and verifiable civil servants.

    The statement, which quoted a circular by the Head of Service, Mrs. Alisabatu Dada Onazi, said the exercise would be conducted simultaneously in the three zones, from locations in Kaduna, Kafanchan and Zaria.

    It specified the order in which the personnel from each ministry are expected to appear for the exercise and instructed that civil servants bring their letters of appointment, last promotion and means of identification, which should be any of the following: national identity card, driver’s licence, permanent voter’s card or international passport.

    According to the statement, “the head of service directs that civil servants should appear before the verification team for screening and collection of their salary cheques for June.

    “In this regard, the Kaduna State government last week signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the United Bank for Africa and Zenith Bank to partner in updating the civil service payroll.”

    The exercise is scheduled for completion next Wednesday.

  • TUC urges Wike to recall sacked poly workers

    TUC urges Wike to recall sacked poly workers

    The Trade Union Congress (TUC) yesterday urged Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike to recall the 344 lecturers and other employees of the Rivers State Polytechnic, Bori.

    In a statement by its President, Bobboi Bala Kaigama, and Secretary General Musa Lawal, TUC said: “If the reported cases of mass sack of 344 lecturers and others employed at the Rivers State Polytechnic, Bori, since September 2014 by the past administration, led by Chibuike Amaechi, and the disbandment of the Rivers State Road Traffic Management Authority (TIMA-RIV) are anything to go by, then the union might be tempted to believe that Wike is out to play politics of vendetta.”

    The TUC noted that such action would not be in tandem with the nation’s wish and Rivers interest.

    It decried the sack, especially with the grave consequences it portends to the affected workers, their dependants and the society.

    The union  said the governor’s actions were most likely the fallout of the political acrimony that characterised the period before and during the general elections in the state.

    It said such considerations ought to have gone with that period.

    The statement said: “Right now, good governance should be the governor’s priority.”

  • Workers’ salary arrears

    Within the last two weeks or so, the nation’s consciousness was awakened to the backlog of salaries owed workers by many state governments. The attention of this writer was first drawn to it by a call from the Osun State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) urging the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to come to the aid of the workers by donating food item and sundry relief materials to save them from starvation.

    At first, one thought it was one of those gimmicks by politicians to gain attention which may eventually add up to nothing. But then, the elections were already over. What purpose would such a seemingly campaign of calumny serve at this point in time, one had reasoned?

    Soon, events began to unfold in quick succession such that it became obvious that the call was not just for nothing. At least, two demonstrations in the state capital that drew attention to the desperate plight of workers were to follow subsequently. One of such was by civil society organizations during the June 12 celebrations.

    As if these were not enough to generate public concern, the state governor, Rauf Aregbesola was to shock everybody when he reportedly said the resolution of the salary arrears imbroglio was beyond him. He told state house reporters “the truth is that I will not fail to say that it is a situation absolutely beyond my control”.

    Aregbesola hinged his position on the sharp drop in federal allocations which subsequently disorganized his budget. But, in an apparent bid to stave off accusations of any form of mismanagement, the governor was quick to add that he had transformed the state than he met it in 2010 and that such transformation was as a result of effective application of resources. The message the governor intended to pass across was that though the salary situation was that bad, it should not be misconstrued as an evidence of reckless spending. We shall return to this later.

    Then enter the case of Benue State that is also in months of arrears such that have compelled Governor Ortom to conclude plans to borrow money to pay just one month across board. He has also been shouting on roof tops that the departed governor, Gabriel Suswam left a debt burden of N90 billion as against the N9.2 billion he had claimed.

    The list is endless. No less than 18 states are reported owing between two and 11 months salary arrears at the end of May. These are Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bauchi, Benue, Cross River and Ekiti. Others are Imo, Katsina, Kogi, Ogun, Ondo, Osun and Oyo. The rest are Rivers, Plateau and Zamfara among others.

    Some of the defaulting governors have put up spirited efforts to clarify their positions on the salary arrears index. But even as they strive to give the impression that the situation is not all that bad, the bold face they feign pales into insignificance in the face of the pressure they now mount on the federal government for some bailout. Some of them have even gone further to demand a restructuring of the revenue allocation formula.

    Others have been striving to exculpate themselves from the chain of events that led to the current predicament. They lay the blame chiefly on the dwindling receipts from the federation account consequent upon the drop in oil price at the international market.

    Attempts have also been made to shift culpability to the regime of Jonathan for mismanaging the economy. Jonathan can as well be blamed for everything under the sun, including obvious excesses and duplicity of some of the governors both immediate past and serving.

    But at what point will the governors take direct responsibility for the management of the funds entrusted in their care? Why is it that some states are not owing despite the fact they are not immune from the factors cited by some of the governors for scandalously attempting to starve workers to death? Why are states like Akwa Ibom, Rivers, Imo, Abia and Ondo that are oil producing and receive higher revenue than others also owing?

    Answers to these posers can be located in how effective the respective governors managed resources at their disposal. And they inexorably point to the incongruity in attempts to evade responsibility by trying to solely hold other factors culpable. It is the responsibility of the governors to determine areas of priority in the disbursement of their revenue. If they decide to inject them to some other projects in utter neglect of workers salaries, it is their decision and they cannot shy away from its consequences.

    Effective planning would require that all competing needs are weighed on the scale ensuring no sector is funded to the detriment of others. If the governors had done that irrespective of the dwindling revenue, the situation might have been somehow different. The governors should take the blame for the backlog of salaries owed workers. After all, they ought to have provided for the rainy day since it is common place that states can solely depend on receipts from the federation account at their own peril.

    It is mismanagement of resources to deploy funds such that workers emoluments are not paid for months no matter how competing other needs were. That brings us to the Osun situation in which the governor had sought to rationalize the salary arrears on the ground that he has transformed the state through judicious application of funds. That could as well be. But a ‘judicious application’ of funds that left a backlog of seven months salaries ought to face another verification test. The first law of nature is self survival. Labor is also rated the most important factor of production. Other factors without the human capital will lead to nothing. It is smacks of inverted logic to canvass the argument of effective application of resources in the face of the scandalous inability of the government to pay months of salaries. You cannot have effective application of resource when one critical sector is yawning for urgent attention through obvious neglect. That is the obvious flaw in pushing that argument any further. He may have done well in other sectors. He may have invested heavily in infrastructure that will benefit humanity in the nearest future.

    But a situation that compelled a sitting governor to publicly admit helplessness says it all. He may have presented the matter as honestly as he found it. However, in portraying the picture of helplessness, he opened his flanks to diatribe. For, the immediate question the admission conjures is what business he still has there if the situation has defied him? That is why the governor’ altercation with Senator Ben Bruce on his comic gesture to donate part of his wardrobe allowance to Osun workers is patently unnecessary.

    Beyond these however, is the urgent need for a fundamental restructuring of the federal order. As long as we concentrate virtually all powers on the central authority, so long will systemic stress from the component units impair any meaningful progress. Happily, we now have a regime that has promised change. That change must be fundamental and far reaching for real results to be recorded. But, there are vested interests benefiting from the decadent past that will not let go. We must muster the political will to do the right thing through immediate constitutional change. Such change should devolve powers by allowing a greater measure of autonomy to the components units.

  • Aregbesola to workers: I share your pains

    •Govt to pay before June 30

    Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola has appealed to workers to be calm, saying the salaries will be paid before June 30. He said his government was not immune to their pains.

    He spoke when the Australian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Jonathan Richardson, visited him at the Government House in Osogbo.

    Aregbesola said: “I want to appeal to workers to be calm as their period of hardship caused by the delay in the payment of salaries will be solved very soon. We are with them in their pains, we are not immune to any of their pains.

    “I have not received any salary ever since I became governor. I urge workers to take heart, in no distant time, at least, before the end of this month, we will all put this terrible experience behind us.”

    The governor said the state is eager to partner with Australia for the benefit that will come to the state and the country.

    He noted that apart from gold and other resources, the state has a large deposit of gemstones.

    Aregbesola added that the mining licence that the state gave to an Australian company was small compared to the mineral deposit that the state is blessed with.

    He said: “We have a lot of potentials in mining, agriculture and technology. As important as mining and agriculture are, acquisition of knowledge is quite important to development.

    “We look forward to the contribution of countries like yours. Whether we like it or not, a society without skilled people will soon fizzle out. We are eager to partner with Australia for the benefits that will both come to us. We are struggling hard to develop our state on every facet.”

    The high commissioner said his country is ready to offer necessary assistance to develop the economy.

    Richardson commended the people for the peaceful transition, saying the negative view of Nigeria to foreigners is due to lack of information.

    He stressed that Australia is ready to partner with Osun because of the state potentials in tourism, agriculture, mining, among other areas.

    “We think we have a lot to offer in mining, agriculture, tourism. We are happy to inform your government on how we can help in some of the areas.”

  • Ogun not owing workers

    Ogun not owing workers

    The Ogun State government has said it does not owe civil servants. A statement by the Secretary to the State Government, Taiwo Adeoluwa, refuted the report in a national daily (not The Nation).

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to a story published yesterday titled: “18 states bankrupt, can’t pay workers’ salary”. The said erroneous report lists Ogun as one of the  states.

    “We wish to state that the said publication is not only mischievous but misleading.  We are concerned that a national newspaper would publish such a falsehood without verifying its claims and without regard to the ethics of sound journalism.

    “We hereby state without any equivocation that since inception of this administration, Ogun State has not owed its workers.

    “We are indeed one of the few states which, despite the dwindling Federal Allocation, have consistently been paying workers’ salary promptly. For the avoidance of doubt, workers in Ogun State have received their May 2015 salary.

    “We hope that the newspaper will do the right thing by apologising and by retracting the false publication.”

     

  • APC leader pleads with workers

    APC leader pleads with workers

    An All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain has appealed to public servants in Osun State that their salaries will be paid soon.

    The APC leader in Alimosho Local Government of Lagos State, who hails from Osun State, Bola Adeyemi Smart, said efforts were on to pay the accumulated salaries and arrears.

    He enjoined the workers and pensioners to always maintain the peace and shun violence that may derail their existing relationship with the government.

    He admonished the government to always give urgent attention to salaries as soon as the monthly allocation from the federation account is released.

  • Labour squares up against workers’ retrenchment

    Labour squares up against workers’ retrenchment

    Organised labour has issued a warning to the Federal and state governments, as well as the  private sector of the danger in retrenching workers due to the economic downturn, saying the body would resist such a move since there is an alarming rate of unemployment in the country, reports TOBA AGBOOLA.

    The organised labour has read the riot act to the Federal, states and private organisations, that it would react to any downsizing measure against its members under the guise of harsh economic condition the country is passing through. They said reducing staff strength cannot be the only  solution to the problem.

    It warned that such an action  may further fuel the uncertainty in the labour market.

    The warning by Labour may not be unconnected with the statement credited to the former Coordinating Minister of Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, that government is living on borrowed money to pay workers salaries.

    In addition, strong indications have also emerged that workers in both private and public sectors are faced with mass retrenchment as crude oil price continues its descent.

    However, the organised labour is accusing the states, and particularly, the past government of diversion of money resrved for wages payment to prosecute the just concluded 2015 general elections.

    According to them, it is worrisome to note that the general elections gulped a lot of money which has taken a toll on governments’ finances.

    They said both the private and the public sectors should not retrench workers at this  time when the purchasing power of the average Nigerian worker is at its lowest ebb, adding that already, there is  high unemployment rate in the country.

    Stakeholders in the oil sector painted a gloomy picture of the economy and the prospects of workers this year. They based their projections on recent happenings in the Nigerian and global economies.

    Oil prices have been on a steep decline since June 2014 as a result of slow demand and the United States’ oil boom, which has resulted in  over-supply. The global oil benchmark, Brent, against which Nigerian oil is priced, recently, tumbled below $58 per barrel, hitting its lowest level since May 2009.

    Recently, the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), gave indications to this effect when it raised the alarm that companies, especially petroleum companies, have plans to retrench some staff.

    According to the association, non-core employees of oil firms in the country may be asked to quit their jobs, if the fall in oil prices persists till the end of June.

    The Media Officer, PENGASSAN, Mr. Babatunde Oke, said employers have grown weary of the slump.

    “The effect might be severe if it continues till middle of the year because some employers are already complaining that they may need to shed weight, if it persists.  Of course, it will affect contract staff, if the slump persists,” Oke added.

    The President, Trade Union Congress, TUC, Comrade Bobboi Kaigama, warned of dire consequences if the both the  government and private sectors decide to retrench workers under the guise of bad economy.

    “Any attempt by the government to sack workers or reduce their salaries in the name of bad economy will amount to a declaration of war on Nigerian workers and would be resisted by the labour movement.

    “0ur warning is very clear because when the economy boomed, the political office holders were freeloading as if there is no tomorrow while most Nigerian workers live below $2 per day.

    “While workers called for better pay package in the past, but were rebuffed by the ruling elite, especially those in government, then, the  helpless workers roasted as if they were not stakeholders in the system,” Kaigama said.

    According to Kaigama, labour is worried that indeed, as at today, the meagre N18,000 monthly minimum wage approved in 2011 by the Federal Government has not been fully implemented by some state governments and as such, it will be the height of insensitivity for any government to contemplate sacking civil servants or reducing their pay in the name of austerity measures.

    “Our union has urged the Federal Government to reduce their pay packets and mouth-watering allowances of political office holders and check other leakages that encourage corruption in the system, but the wise counsel fell on deaf ears.

    “Records will also show that this union on several occasions advised the Federal Government to stop the depletion of foreign reserves and needless rush to seek foreign loans for white elephant projects because such mindless profligacy can only lead to the collapse of the economy.” he said.

    The Secretary-General, Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria, ASCSN, Mr. Alade Lawal, said workers should not be made to bear the burden of the country’s distressed economy.

    Lawal said: “As for the issue of resorting to retrenchment as a result of the drop in the price of crude oil in the international market, labour will surely resist it.

    “We have already sensitised and mobilised our members on the matter.

    We workers did not create the problem and we will surely not allow the ruling elite to use us as tools to be dumped because of the temporary setback in the pricing of oil.

    “When the going was good, we were left unattended to. Now that the chicken has come home to roost, they, and not innocent workers, should bear the brunt.

    “We are fully prepared and on red alert, waiting for signals from the two labour centres in the event of any attempt to retrench workers as part of recently introduced austerity measures.”

    He  added that there is high hope among Nigerians that the new government would bring fresh perspective to bear on governance as is the case in civilised countries of the world.

    His words: “There is no doubting the fact that the challenges that lay ahead are enormous. We nonetheless believe that with hardwork, perseverance and selfless service to our fatherland, you will overcome and move the country to the next level.

    “Today, Nigerians yearn for good governance, freedom of conscience and freedom of expression so that they can participate actively on how they are governed as free citizens entitled to fundamental human rights in a democratic society.

    “Consequently, we solicit that this administration should hit the ground running and live up to expectations of many Nigerians who crave for change by healing the wounds and bitterness occasioned by the electioneering campaigns and lift Nigeria to greater heights by addressing the myriads of problems facing the country, including economic problems, infrastructural decay, energy crisis, joblessness and corruption.”

    He enjoined the new government to be focused and wary of public officials or anybody who may want to advise him to toe the path of retrenching workers in the name of reforms citing the temporary setbacks in the global oil market as reasons.

    “We need to caution that such step, if taken, will only worsen the already precarious situation the country has found itself in.

    “Our take is that with the plugging of loopholes where heavy leakages from the treasury are experienced on a daily basis, coupled with robust management of government’s expenditure profile, Nigeria as a nation will surely get it right and be better for it,” he said.

    On his part, the General Secretary, Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, Dr. Peter Ozo-Eson, warned that the NLC would meet to take an appropriate decision, should any state government decide to sack workers.

    He said: “Our position, as already stated, is that there are adjustments that government can make by cutting the cost of governance.

    “We have already warned that they shouldn’t allow workers to be victims of the downturn in the oil price.

    “We believe that the down-turn should not be used to sack workers, they should cut excess waste and the cost of governance. We have a situation where a governor has a retinue of excess aides and entourages; all these can be cut. These are areas where we feel adjustments should be made.”

    Deputy President (South), National Association of Small Medium Enterprises, NASME, Mr. Orimadegun Agboade, said retrenchment had already begun in some sectors.

    He said: “With the way things are right now, many companies may reduce their staff.

    “Based on recent events, federal, state and local governments still owe salaries. It is an indication that things are not right at all. In fact, many of us are afraid of what will happen.”

    Agboade stated that the current foreign exchange rate is the harbinger of the gale of retrenchments that would sweep workers out of the manufacturing sector.

    “For instance, I am a manufacturer of medicine; I received a notice from my bank recently that the Federal Government had placed an embargo on all letters of credit. The implication of this is that immediately we run out of the raw materials we have now, the hope of getting more will be slim, or it won’t come on time.

    “In the pharmaceutical industry, where I belong, close to 98 per cent of our raw materials are imported. A lot of companies are already cutting salaries,” Agboade added.

    He said the scale of retrenchment could be as high as 25 per cent, adding that if things were not sorted out quickly, it could reach 50 per cent.

    Similarly, the Chairman, National Association of Small Scale Industrialists, Lagos State chapter, NASSI, Mr. Segun Kuti-George, said the fact that the foreign exchange rate was not in equilibrium with the naira was a sign that mass retrenchment might be closer than expected.

    “We have more naira chasing fewer dollars now. Also, the monetary policy is moving from 12 per cent to 13 per cent higher interest rate. We now have a higher rate of exchange, which inherently means inflation.

    “It means that prices of imported and locally-made goods will go up, which would mean lower demand and, therefore, lesser profits for companies. This may then lead to layoffs,” he said.

    The Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, LCCI, Mr Muda Yusuf, predicted that the year would be challenging for businesses, as the cost of production would increase, while purchasing power would decline.

    He explained that businesses would have to look at all possible options for survival, including cost reduction in other areas. The process of reducing costs, according to him, may result in cutting the number of employees.

    Recently, the International Labour Organisation, ILO, in its report predicted that unemployment and retrenchment will continue to rise in the next five years in Nigeria and other countries, as the global economy has entered a new period combining slower growth, widening inequalities and turbulence.

    By 2019, more than 212 million people will be out of work, up from the current 201 million, according to the World Employment and Social Outlook – Trends 2015, released by the ILO.

    “More than 61 million jobs have been lost since the start of the global crisis in 2008 and our projections show that unemployment will continue to rise until the end of the decade. This means the jobs crisis is far from over so there is no place for complacency,” the ILO Director-General, Guy Ryder, said.

    The report noted that the employment situation had improved in the United States and Japan, but remained difficult in a number of advanced economies, particularly in Europe.

    The employment situation according to ILO, has not improved much in Sub-Saharan Africa, despite better economic growth performance.

    It stated that the steep decline in oil and gas prices, if sustained, might improve the employment outlook somewhat in many advanced economies and several Asian countries according to some forecasts.

    By contrast, it will hit labour markets hard in major oil and gas producing countries, like Nigeria.

     

    Way forward

    For this challenge to be addressed, the organised labour has advocated cut in the cost of governance, describing the country’s presidential system as the most expensive in the world.

    TUC urged the government to work towards reducing  the cost of governance in the country.

    It stressed the need to cut down on political appointments, insisting also that the situation whereby lawmakers fix their own salaries and allowances must be discouraged and discontinued.

    “We condemned all the state governments owing workers salaries, as it is unhealthy for the nation. We urged both the Federal and State government to cut their expenses in order for them to meet with workers’ salary”, he said.

    The NLC President also canvassed a drastic reduction of the cost of governance in the country which he said was unacceptable.

    He said the high cost of governance could be rectified not by workers’ rationalisation but through fighting corruption and removal of waste in the system.

    “The  cost of governance at all levels, including the legislature, is very high and morally reprehensible and must be brought down, not through rationalisation of personnel (as personnel emoluments constitute an insignificant fraction of cost of governance) but through wiping off of corruption and reduction of waste in the system.”

  • Varsities need effective communication to motivate workers, says don

    With Nigerian universities sourcing workers from a limited pool of qualified experts, the Dean-elect, Faculty of Social Sciences, Obafemi  Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State, Prof Chris Ajila, has advised university administrators to communicate effectively with their workers.

    Ajila said this was the only way to discover what triggers their drive to succeed and maximise their performance.

    Ajila said this while delivering the second Registry lecture series of the Bells University of Technology, (BELLSTECH) Ota, with the  themed: “Managing Human Resources in the 21st Century University System: Challenges and Prospects” last Wednesday.

    Ajila, who has served as Dean, College of Management Science, BELLSTECH, lamented that the shortage of university workers has led to competition for them and also affected productivity as they prefer universities that can provide better condition of service.

    Quoting Maslow’s Hierachy of Needs, Ajila said except their physiological needs (food, sleep, thirst), as well as safety (stable environment), love, esteem and self realisation needs are met the human resource department is just paying a lip service.

    He, therefore, advised administrators to foster a close working relationship with every subordinate on an individual basis through effective communication.

    “A smile or a word of greeting when we see a colleague or boss reassures him that he matters. Have the sense not to monopolise conversations. A good talker avoids annoying mannerism of speech or gesture. We need to develop good listening skills and at times be at social ease with others whether they are clients, superiors, colleagues or juniors,” he said.

    With humans, being the most critical resource for national development, facing a lot of challenges, Ajila said managing human resources in the 21st century appears more complex.

    He noted that one of the forces affecting employees’ performance in the 21st century is technology, which keeps evolving.  He therefore charged employees to upgrade their skills.

    “Human resource management is being revolutionalised by the continuing advances in technology. Automation and other technology innovation may reduce the number of employees needed but they also increase the level of skills needed by employees who operate the new machines or systems.

    “There is need for today’s employees to get acquainted with and equipped for the new technology that is being introduced into the workplace,” he said.

    In her remarks, the registrar, Mrs Oluwayemisi Gbadebo, said the lecture provided administrators with the opportunity for professional development, which they need to remain in the system.

    The Vice-Chancellor, Prof Isaac Adeyemi, said the registry is the heartbeat of any university which is connected to the achievement of the educational goal and the school’s objective.

    He advised non academic members of staff to stop feeling inferior to academics as they all contribute to the success of a university.

  • Oyo workers suspend strike

    Oyo workers suspend strike

    The Oyo State chapter of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Friday suspended its strike after the leadership of the union said that it had reached an agreement with the state government over payment of salary arrears.

    The strike lasted nine days.

    The union directed its members to stay off work since May 26 over unpaid salaries for workers and pensions for retirees.

    Announcing the suspension Friday, the chairman of the state’s chapter of the NLC, Mr. Waheed Olojede, called on the workers to resume work on Monday, June 8, saying that an agreement had been reached with the government after several days of negotiations.

    He said: “After a successful negotiation which led to the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with the state government, the labour union has resolved to suspend the strike.”

    He added that the union had also reached an agreement with the state government on modalities to adopt in paying the outstanding March, April and May salaries.

    The Oyo NLC chairman also said that an agreement was also reached on the payment of grade levels one to 12 as soon as the next allocation to the state was released while levels 13 and above would be paid later.

    Explaining why the Union adopted the style of payment, Olojede said that it was better than agreeing on half salary for all workers.