Tag: NLC

  • Petrol Subsidy: NLC, TUC Suspends Nationwide Strike

    Petrol Subsidy: NLC, TUC Suspends Nationwide Strike

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria, (TUC), yesterday agreed to suspend its planned strike scheduled to begin tomorrow to enable further negotiations with the Federal Government.

    The resolution was announced by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila and confirmed by the President of the Nigerian Labour Congress, Joe Ajaero, after a six-hour meeting between the Federal Government and the organized labour at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    At the meeting, a 7-point resolution was reached on the issues surrounding the removal of subsidy on petrol.

    Other key resolutions include establishing a joint committee comprising the Federal Government, and organised labour to review proposals for wage increase upward.

    Additionally, the World Bank financed cash transfer scheme will be reviewed, with a focus on proposing the inclusion of low-income earners in the program.

    The parties are to reconvene on June 19, 2023, to agree on an implementation framework.

    Details Later…

  • FG, NLC Resume Talks on Subsidy Removal

    FG, NLC Resume Talks on Subsidy Removal

    The Federal Government has reconvened a meeting with the leadership of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) for a continuation of the discussions on the removal of petroleum subsidy.

    President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, and members of his national executives arrived at the Presidential Villa around 5 pm on Monday for the meeting.

    The newly appointed Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, is attending the meeting as well as the Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO) of Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Mele Kyari.

    The meeting which comes 48 hours ahead of the proposed nationwide strike by the NLC over the removal of subsidy is the second to hold in less than a week.

    The leadership of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) had hours ago met with the FG committee and presented a list of demands before the government, the top of which is an increase in the minimum wage and a reversal to the old pump price while negotiations are ongoing.

    The series of meetings came in the wake of a hike and shortage of fuel across the country following President Tinubu’s inauguration day declaration that subsidy on the product “is gone”.

    Since then, the labour unions have urged the Federal Government to ensure a reversal to the old pump price of the product among other demands while NLC has issued an ultimatum to that effect.

    The union said it would embark on a nationwide strike on Wednesday to press for their demands.

    The government has since then moved in swiftly to avert the national shutdown and has been liaising with organised labour to reach a compromise.

  • Subsidy: Industrial Court Bars NLC, TUC From Embarking On Strike

    Subsidy: Industrial Court Bars NLC, TUC From Embarking On Strike

    The National Industrial Court (NIC) has restrained organised labour from embarking on strike over the removal of fuel subsidy.

    Details to follow…

  • Subsidy: NLC Boycott Meeting With FG, TUC Negotiates On Wage Increase

    Subsidy: NLC Boycott Meeting With FG, TUC Negotiates On Wage Increase

    The Nigerian Labour Congress ( NLC) was absent on Sunday evening at the reconvened meeting between the Federal Government and representatives of the organised labour centre at the State House, Abuja.

    The first meeting held last Wednesday to discuss the contentious issue of the withdrawal of the fuel subsidy was attended by representatives of both the NLC and Trade Union Congress (TUC) but at the reconvened meeting on Sunday, representatives of the NLC failed to turn up.

    At the resumed meeting, the Trade Union Congress presented a list of demands to government, with minimum wage review topping the list.

    Read more: Senator Wamakko Symphatises With People Of Tangaza Over Banditry Attack

    Speaking with newsmen after the meeting held at the Conference room of the Chief of Staff’s office which lasted for about two and a half hours, both sides disclosed that negotiations would continue from Tuesday when the federal government side, which said it would be taking the demands to President Bola Tinubu, is expected to come with answers to labour’s myriad of demands.

    Apart from the demand for a review of the minimum wage, the TUC also demanded a tax break for Nigerian workers even as it said it would leave the remaining items on the list undisclosed until the government representatives must have relayed the list to the President and come back with positions.

    Spokesman of the government’s side, Mr Dele Alake, expressed satisfaction at the proceedings, giving a hint that the demands by the TUC were not impracticable, but noted also that the President must be allowed time to consider them.

    According to him, government will look into the issue of minimum wage, since the removal of subsidy has the immediate consequence of reducing the purchasing power of the people.

    He added that government would be putting a tripartite committee together to study all dynamics relating to the subsidy.

    His words: “Well, as you all know, we had this reconvened meeting today as we promised you few days ago when we had the initial meeting with the Labour movement. We said we were going to reconvene today to keep the engagement on, in order to diffuse the tension in the land as a result of the withdrawal of subsidy, which is a reality. Now, we are very happy to announce to Nigerians that this engagement has been very productive.

    “The TUC that attended today’s meeting presented a list of demands and those demands we have studied and we are going to present to Mr President for his consideration. But those demands we can announce to Nigerians that a lot of the items on the list are not impracticable. What we need to do is to study the numbers very well, then we have asked the TUC to also give us a leeway to consult very exhaustively and reconvene on Tuesday to actually look at the numbers’ viability, practicability of all the items that have been presented to us.

    “Now, most important and top priority on the list, which the government is also looking at very seriously and the President has announced before, is the issue of the minimum wage, which the Labour movement has demanded is the consequential impact of this removal of subsidy.

    “So, government is look at that and Mr President is most likely going to constitute a tripartite committee that is a committee of federal government, including the state and then the organised Labour and the private sector.

    “Now, this is a tripartite arrangement, it will be a committee that will study all the dynamics of a wage increase in percentages, the numbers and the categories that will be affected. So by Tuesday, when we come back to reconvene to meet with the TUC again, we should have very concrete items to present to the world. But the most important thing for today is that we are making appreciable progress with the Labour”.

    Asked what the TUC demands are, he said

    “it is a list but we are not going to be listing all of them now. The most important is the minimum wage that is increase of minimum wage. Because, when this thing is removed, the argument of Labour is that there is an immediate impact on the workers, on the purchasing power because price of fuel has gone up.

    “So, that will necessarily reduce the purchasing power of the average worker. So, the next thing of immediate consequence is to increase the purchasing power of the worker. So, that to me and to all of us on this side is the top most priority on the list. There are other things like the tax holidays which some categories of workers will be beneficiaries. But the most important is the minimum wage”.

    On whether the team is also negotiating with the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Alake said “no. We are not, but we are making efforts to reach NLC. We all agreed that we are going to meet here, but again, in this game there are dynamics. Sometimes, they could be meeting with their own executives and not able to meet with us, or they could want to postpone or they have not actually articulated their list of demands as the TUC. But we cannot second guess why they are not here. But efforts are being made to reach them, we are not isolating them at all”, he said.

    Asked if the meeting discussed the claim that NLC was working for the Presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) in the just concluded elections, Peter Obi, Alake declared “no not at all. It has no relevance to the discussion on the concrete terms of the welfare of the workers. Our discussion was majorly on the welfare of workers, how to cushion the impact of this subsidy removal on workers that’s all. Not on any political partisanship.”

    Also speaking to reporters, President of the TUC, Festus Osifo, said his team attended the meeting as directed by the union’s National Executive Council (NEC), saying they had submitted their list of demands and would be expecting a feedback by next Tuesday.

    Asked if his union was satisfied with the discussion so far, Osifo said “yes, we have presented the list of our demands to them and they received it in good faith that they will go back to their principal and come back to us on Tuesday.

    “So we’re hopeful that the demands that we have presented will be reviewed in the best interest of Nigerian workers and the entire Nigerian masses”, he said.

    On what the spefic demands of TUC are, he said “the demands are so long, they are so many, part of it is the demand for a (review) of the minimum wage and we stated that for us, quite apt that the minimum today is not a living wage, as we all know. The value of the minimum wage since it was negotiated, has plummeted to a very abysmal level, as it is today.

    “Because they are going back to Mr President, we also think that we should also give them that benefit of doubt because the things we presented to them the last time, they did not also reveal it before the press so it is also quite apt for them to go back, maybe when we meet on Tuesday, we can dissect them one after the other and be much more specific”, he said.

    The federal government’s team to yesterday’s meeting was led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator George Akume. Others are the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefie; former Governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole; and the Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Mele Kyari.

    Also at the meeting were the Executive Secretary of the National Sugar Development Council (NSDC), Zacch Adedeji; Executive Vice President, Downstream, of the NNPCL, Yemi Adetunji and Hon James Faleke, among others.

    The seven-man TUC team was led by Osifo.

  • Fuel Subsidy: NLC Dismiss Plans To Embark On Strike

    Fuel Subsidy: NLC Dismiss Plans To Embark On Strike

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has dismissed rumors that it is planning to embark on a strike today June 2, over the removal of petrol subsidy.

    There have been rumors that the NLC had fixed Friday to commence a strike in protest against the subsidy removal.

    Reacting, the head of information and public affairs of NLC, Benson Upah, asked Nigerians to disregard the rumor.

    “Our attention has been drawn to stories circulating in the social media claiming that the NLC would begin protest action on June 2 against the increase in the pump price of petrol. In as much as we are outraged by this mindless price increase which is intended to bring untold hardship to Nigerians, we have no plan to start any action on June 2. What we do have for now are organ meetings slated for June 2 to deliberate on the price issue.”he said

    Upah said the NLC would keep Nigerians informed on its next line of action after meetings.

  • Subsidy: FG, NLC Meeting Ended With No Agreement

    Subsidy: FG, NLC Meeting Ended With No Agreement

    The meeting between the Federal Government and the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) over fuel subsidy removal has ended without a consensus.

    The meeting at the Conference Hall of the Chief of Staff to the President came after the announcement by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu that subsidy on fuel had gone and new prices of the Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) introduced by NNPCL.

    The organised labour was led by the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero and his counterpart for the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Comrade Festus Osifo.

    The former President of NLC and immediate past governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the Permanent Secretary, State House, Tijjani Umar, the Head of Service of the Federation, Dr. Folashade Yemi-Esan, the Group Chief Executive Officer, of the NNPCL, Mele Kyari, and a Director in the defunct Tinubu/Shettima Campaign Organization, Dele Alake, among others attended the meeting.

    Speaking after the stalemated meeting, Ajaero and Osifo stressed that status quo be maintained on the prices of PMS while negotiations continued.

    Both labour leaders said another meeting would hold after discussions with members of their executives on the outcomes of Wednesday’s interaction with federal government team.

    Ajaero said there was no consensus after the meeting, adding that “As far as labour is concerned, we didn’t have a consensus in this meeting.”

    He picked holes in the decision of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited to review the petrol pump price in its filling stations nationwide before the meeting, stating that the price increase put the labour unions in a difficult position during negotiations.

    “That’s the principle of negotiation. You don’t put the partner, ask them to negotiate under gunpoint.

    “The prayers of the NLC is that we go back to statusquo, negotiate, think of alternatives and all the effects and how to manage the effects this action is going to have on the people. If it is an action that must take off.

    “The subsidy provision has been made up to the end of June. And before then, conscious people, labour management, government should be able to think of what will happen at the end of June. You don’t start it before the time,” Ajaero said.

    Speaking on the outcome of the meeting from the side of government, Alake said talks on solutions to all issues at hand would continue.

    He said: “We have been deliberating on finding very amicable solutions to the issue at hand, to the queue and all of that and the increase in pump price.

    “We had a very robust engagement. We cross-fertilized ideas, ideas flew from all sides and there is one thing that is remarkable even from the Labour side, and that is Nigeria. We are all looking at the peace, progress and stability of Nigeria. That is what is paramount.

    “Of course, the NNPCL CEO is here, Mr Kyari, we cannot go into details now because the talks are still ongoing. We cannot finish everything at one setting, so, we have adjourned now, we are continuing the talks at a later date very shortly.

    “But the point is that the talks are ongoing and it always better for all sides to keep talking with a view to arriving at a very amicable resolution that will be in the longer term interest for all Nigerians. That is as much as we can say now.”

  • Fuel Subsidy: NLC Frowns At NNPC Latest Pump Price

    Fuel Subsidy: NLC Frowns At NNPC Latest Pump Price

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) on Wednesday frowned at the adjustment of pump prices by the Nigerian National Petrol Company Limited.

    Barely 48 hours after President Bola Tinubu announced an end to the subsidy era during his inaugural speech at Eagle Square, Abuja on Monday, the NNPCL confirmed the hike in the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit also known as petrol.

    Since the presidential pronouncement, fuel queues have resurfaced across the country as Nigerians forage for the premium product which was rose from around N185 per litre to between N400 and N600 per litre.

    Worried by the situation, the NLC President, Joe Ajaero, issued a statement expressing worry that the national oil company would announce an increment.

    Describing the development as unfortunate, Ajaero said the NNPCL’s action was coming on the heels of an ongoing meeting with stakeholders in the oil and gas sector to manage the unilateral but unfortunate announcement by the President.

    “It is therefore unacceptable and we seriously condemn it. Good faith negotiation is key to reaching agreement. What the government has done is like holding a gun to the head of Nigerian people and bringing undue pressure on the leaders thus undermine the dialogue,” the NLC President said.

    “We call on the federal government to immediately instruct the NNPC to withdraw this vexatious Pricing template to allow free flow of discussions by the parties. Nigerians would not accept any manipulations of any kind from any of the parties especially from the representatives of the Government.

    “Our commitment to this process is buoyed on the fact that all the parties would be committed to ensuring that it is carried out within the ambits of liberty without undue pressure. The release of that Template may not allow us to continue if nothing is done to withdraw it so that the dialogue can continue unhindered. It is clear that Government is actually trying to scuttle the process.”

  • FG, NLC To Meet Over Fuel Subsidy

    FG, NLC To Meet Over Fuel Subsidy

    Federal Government representatives are expected to meet with the leadership of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) today by 2pm over the planned removal of fuel subsidy.

    Joe Ajaero, NLC National President, disclosed this during an interview Wednesday morning on Channels TV’s Sunrise Daily programme.

    In his inaugural speech on Monday, Tinubu had said “petrol subsidy is gone.” The statement immediately sparked panic buying and fuel queues across the nation.

    Weighing in, Ajaero said the President should have asked questions and found out the implications of fuel subsidy removal on Nigerians on the streets.

    He listed the alternatives to include the repair of the nation’s four refineries, provision of transportation of alternatives for the Nigerian workers, amongst others.

    The NLC boss said: “Government seems to have shown interest in discussion. As at last night, they reached out and we have fixed 2pm today (Wednesday) to commence discussion.

    “There, all other issues will be discussed because you can’t just say there is no subsidy and then you are not producing and leave us to the vagaries of the market, to people who want to sell the product they bought for N10 for N100 to maximize profit. If there is no more garri, we must find out what to eat.

    “The pronouncement by Mr President is as good as law and if in the process we make a law that is not practicable, the same people that made the law can look at it,” Ajaero said while calling for a review of the President’s pronouncement.

    “Does it bring pleasure to us to say subsidy is gone and people start suffering? Is it not part of leadership for us to look at how the suffering of the people can be reduced?”

  • Nasarawa Speaker assures NLC of more workers friendly laws, promises to step down bill on contributory pension scheme

    Nasarawa Speaker assures NLC of more workers friendly laws, promises to step down bill on contributory pension scheme

    “… as NLC passes vote of confidence on Speaker Balarabe’s leadership qualities…”

    From Leo Zuanke, Nassarawa

    Speaker, Nasarawa State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon Ibrahim Balarabe Abdullahi, says that the House would continue to enact laws that will better the lots of workers in the State.

    This, the Speaker said, is to improve on the standard of living of workers and their family members, enhance peace and speedy development in the State.

    The Speaker stated this while playing host to officials of Nigeria Labour Congress ( NLC), Nasarawa State Chapter today in Lafia.

    Abdullahi appreciated the NLC for the visit and assured them of the assembly’s support to the union at all times.

    ” My consolation is that the person I am working with, His Excellency, Governor Abdullahi Sule has passion for workers in the state.

    ” Even if you are an enemy of Engr. A A Sule, you will appreciate him for what he is doing for the people of the State as he is also workers friendly,” he said.

    The Speaker assured the NLC that the House will step down the Contributory Pension Scheme Bill that is before the House in the interest of the workers.

    ” I have listen carefully to your complaint and I want to assure you that we will step down the Contributory Pension Scheme Bill that was brought by the executive since you have complaint against the bill,” he said.

    “This Assembly is coming to an end tomorrow Wednesday and by the grace of God I am part of the 7th Assembly and if the bill will come up we will subject it to public hearing for inputs, this Assembly always want to be part of history, good history so our commitment as Representatives of the people is to always do that which is in the best interest of the people “the Speaker added.

    The Speaker called on the workers and other people of the State to support Gov. Abdullahi Sule to succeed.

    Earlier, Comrade Ayuba Ismaila Okoh, the State NLC Chairman said that the visit was to familiarize themselves with the Speaker and to also tender their complaint.

    Okoh also passed a vote of confidence on Speaker Balarabe over his leadership style and wish him success in his Speakership ambition.

    The NLC Chairman, however, appealed to the Speaker to step down the Contributory Pension Scheme bill that was brought by the Executive to the House.

    He added that the Contributory Pension Scheme bill in the State is anti- workers.

  • Court Restrains NLC, TUC From Embarking On Strike In Imo

    Court Restrains NLC, TUC From Embarking On Strike In Imo

    A National industrial court sitting in Owerri has issued an interim order restraining the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) or any of its agents or affiliates from embarking or continuing to embark on any strike action in Imo State pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice for interlocutory injunction filed in the suit.

    In the interim injunction signed by Justice Nelson Ogbuanya, the court also restrained the NLC and TUC or any of its affiliates from stopping, hindering, disrupting, or interfering in any manner whatsoever with the provision of services and other work by their members in the civil and public service in Imo pending the hearing and determination of the motion on notice for interlocutory injunction filed in the suit.

    Justice Ogbuanya ordered the applicant which is the Imo State Government to serve the originating summons, motions on notice, and other processes in the suit on the defendants which are NLC and the TUC along with the interim order granted by publication in any national newspaper circulating in Nigeria in the event that prompt service of court processes and the interim order cannot be effected on the trade unions as prescribed under order 7 rule 1 (1)(h)(ii) of the rules of court before the return date of further proceedings.

    The judge however set the return date for the court proceedings and hearing of the matter till May 11, 2023.