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Workers Sets To Down Tools Over Minimum Wage, Gives 12 Days Ultimatum In Kogi

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By Noah Ocheni, Lokoja

Organized labour in Kogi State has given the State government 12 days ultimatum to implement the N30,000 minimum wage or will be forced to begin an indefinite strike.

The Nigeria Labour Congress, (NLC), and the Trade Union Congress, (TUC), gave this ultimatum on Wednesday in a peaceful protest while presenting their letter to the Speaker,  Kogi State House of Assembly on the transfer of the National Minimum Wage from the Exclusive Legislative List to the Concurrent Legislative List.

Speaking on behalf of workers, the Kogi State Chairman, Nigeria Labour Congress, (NLC), Comrade Onuh Edoka said since the state government set up a-17-man committee in 2019, nothing was heard from government again.

While noting that Kogi workers are suffering due to the unfriendly economic condition of the country, the labour leader accused some cabinet members of the state government of trying to mislead Governor Yahaya Bello on critical issues that has to do with workers’ welfare.

“The committee headed by the SSG in 2020 hid under the guise of corona virus not to submit its report to the Governor. Up till now, nothing was heard from the government. Let the committee present the report once and for all.”

” No cabinet member should deceive Governor Bello so that they will not submit their report. The Governor is aiming for something higher, and this could be a panacea to his political ambition” he added.

“We therefore want to plead with You, Distinguished Speaker, to use your good office to prevail on the committee set up by the state government on the implementation of the N30,000. New Minimum Wage so as to guarantee industrial harmony  and peaceful coexistence in the state” he added.

Edoka and his team who were  received by the clerk of the house, Alhaji Ibrahim Amoka on behalf of the Speaker, however, called for an end to percentage salary at the  local Government level.

He lamented that Local Government workers are collecting 40 percent salary noting that, lives is becoming unbearable for them in the state.

“The issue of percentage payment of salary to employees at the Local Government level needed urgent attention of the honourable house to mitigate the effect of the hardships steering the workers at that level in the face.” He added.

“Consequently, there is an urgent need to cash-back all promotions already earned by workers and we seek the intervention of the House of Assembly in this regard please”.

On the bill by the House of representative  to transfer the National Minimum Wage from the Exclusive Legislative List to the Concurrent Legislative List, Edoka admonished President Muhammadu Buhari not to give room for fifth columnist but continue to stand with Nigerian workers.

He recalled that minimum wage is an agreement of the International Labour Organization  which was domesticated during the Alhaji Shehu Shagari in 1981.

“Any attempt to remove Minimum wage from the exclusive list will incidentally bring suffering to all organized Nigeria workers and the vulnerable, because it is the same wage we collect and we buy from them”.

The implications  of transferring the national minimum wage from the Exclusive Legislative List according to him would be a license for State Governors to drag the country back to the era of ridiculous slave wages which in the past had precipitated multifarious industrial crises in different parts of the country”

” It could lead to the exclusion of the private sector (both organised and unorganised) from the concept, rationale and logic of a national minimum wage, yet, it is in this informal sector that horrendously unfair labour practices take place.”

” Removing it will be insulting the intelligence of the national assembly and those  that drafted the constitution that kept it in the exclusive list.He said the bill is anti workers and should be stepped down.”

It could be recalled that  the House of Representatives last two weeks introduced the bill which according to the sponsor, Hon. Garba Mohammed would allow both the Federal and state governments to freely negotiate a minimum wage with workers in line with the nation’s federal system, a move which the protesting workers say does not work in their favour.

The workers said if their demands are not met on or before 22nd March,  2021, they will embark on an indefinite strike.

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