Abuja: thedispatch Staff
Published, Sunday, January 2, 2022
THE NIGERIA
LABOUR CONGRESS has said it would resist and halt the Federal Government from
further carrying out all anti-people policies that have inflicted and impacted negatively
Nigerians in 2022.
The Congress also asked State governors to pay all outstanding
national minimum wage, pension and benefits immediately.
The NLC President, Ayuba Wabba, (pictured above) in his New Year message made
available to journalists in Abuja on Saturday, noted that some states have
continued to violate the National Minimum Wage Act, 2019.
He said, “While most of the States in the North-West geopolitical zone have
started implementing the new national minimum wage, there is an exception in
the case of Zamfara State, which has refused to pay the national minimum wage
and consequential salary adjustment to workers in the State.
“In the
North-East, the exception is Taraba State, which is yet to fully implement the
new national minimum wage. In the North Central, there are still challenges of
full implementation in Benue and Kogi States. In the South-South, the weak link
is Cross River State, which has spurned all negotiation agreements and
entreaties to pay workers in the state the new national minimum wage and
consequential salary adjustment.
“In the
South-East, the Imo and Abia State governments remain thorns in the flesh of
workers. In line with the directives of the National Executive Council of the
Nigeria Labour Congress, we have asked our state councils to commence
industrial actions against the state governments that are yet to implement the
new national minimum wage and pension.”
Wabba lamented
what he described as the deceit and duplicity associated with the politics of
petrol price increase by successive governments.
He noted: “Our
argument has been that there is a limit to the imposition of hardship and
suffering on the fragile shoulders of the Nigerian people.
“It is
gratifying that amidst the deteriorating conditions of living, organised labour
was able to rise up to ensure that the masses of our people were not completely
run over by market forces enabled by the anti-people policies of the government
and at the whims of shylock capitalists.
“Still, the
government is not relenting in its determination to push through further
increases in the pump price of petrol and which as usual had been dubbed as
‘removal of petrol subsidy.’ Well, organised labour has made its position clear
on this matter. We have told government in very clear terms that Nigerians have
suffered enough and will not endure more punishment by way of further petrol
and electricity price increases.”
The labour
leader stressed that the socio-economic pains inflicted by the COVID-19
lockdown in 2020 continued to manifest throughout 2021, adding that the
evidence of the dislocation could be identified in the hyper-inflation of basic
goods and services.
Since Nigerians were exposed to the most turbulent and unpredictable market
realities in the just concluded year, Wabba stated that the organised labour
would reject any further increase “by all means.”
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