Tag: minimum wage

  • Arewa youths back Soludo on N62,000 minimum wage for elected officials

    Arewa youths back Soludo on N62,000 minimum wage for elected officials

    The Arewa Youth Consultative Forum says it supports the statement by  Gov. Charles Soludo of Anambra that governors and other elected officials should earn only the minimum wage given  the country’s current economic realities .

    The National President of the forum, Alhaji Shettima Yerima, said this in an interview with NAN on Monday  in Lagos.

    Soludo had, while reacting to the rejection of the proposed N62,000 minimum wage by the Nigeria Governor’s Forum,said governors and other elected officials too should earn  minimum wage to have a  feel what workers are going through in the face of economic challenges.

    ” Let’s come clean and straight with Nigerians. Nigeria is very poor and broke, but the lifestyle of government and government officials does not show it, especially with the obscene flamboyance in public display,

    “The poor are hungry and impatient, let us not annoy them more with our insensitivity. In this case, I agree with Reverend Father Mbaka, who said elected governors should also earn minimum wage. I agree that we should be paid that so that we can feel that as well.”,Soludo had said .

    Yerima told NAN that in a country where the disparity between the earnings of political leaders and the average citizen is staggering, such a stance is not only refreshing but also necessary in fostering a more equitable society.

    He said: “The statement made by Gov. Charles Soludo of Anambra, regarding the need for governors and other elected officials to earn only the minimum wage in order to reflect the current economic reality of Nigeria is both bold and commendable.

    “For too long, Nigeria has been plagued by corruption and a lack of accountability among its political class. Elected officials often receive exorbitant salaries and allowances while the majority of the population struggles to make ends meet.

    “This imbalance not only breeds resentment among the populace but also perpetuates a culture of entitlement among those in power.

    “By advocating for governors and other elected officials to earn only the minimum wage, the governor is sending a strong message that public service should not be about personal enrichment but  about working towards the common good.”he said.

    Yerima said that Soludo’s statement  should be lauded and supported by all Nigerians, who ,he said ,were tired of the excesses and opulence of their leaders while the country continues to face  challenges.

    The forum ‘s president said it was improper for leaders not to identify with the people  in the face of  widespread poverty, inadequate infrastructure and a struggling healthcare system.

    According to him, elected officials should be  willing to make sacrifices and tighten their belts in solidarity with the people they serve .

    “There is the nerd  for elected officials to be in touch with the realities faced by the average Nigerian, as it is only through shared experiences and empathy that true change can be achieved.

    “The call is a step in the right direction towards creating a more just and equitable society.

    “His bold stance should be supportjed and emulated by leaders at all levels of government, as it signifies a commitment to serving the people rather than exploiting their positions for personal gain.

    “As Nigerians, we must demand accountability and integrity from our political leaders,” he said.

  • Minimum wage: Why labour should consider FG’s offer – Tripartite committee

    Minimum wage: Why labour should consider FG’s offer – Tripartite committee

    The Tripartite Committee on National Minimum Wage has given reasons why the organised labour should have a rethink on the amount it is demanding as minimum wage.

    Alhaji Goni Aji, the chairman of the committee said this in Abuja on Sunday.

    The organised labour is demanding for N250, 000 as minimum wage per month.

    But the Federal Government and Organised Private Sector have offered N62,000 per month.

    Goni said that the labour should reconsider its stance based on economic considerations and non-monetary incentives which the Federal Government had so far provided for workers.

    He listed such incentives to include the N35,000 wage award for all treasury-paid federal workers, N100 billion for the procurement of gas fuelled busses and conversion to gas kits.

    Others include the N125 billion conditional grant, financial inclusion to small and medium scale enterprises and the N25,000 each to be shared to 15 million households for three months, according to him.

    He also cited the N185 billion palliatives loans to states to cushion the effects of fuel subsidy removal and the N200 billion to support the cultivation of hectares of land to boost food production.

    He said that here was another N75 billion to strengthen the manufacturing sector and N1 trillion for student loans for higher education.

    He explained that the release of 42,000 metric tonnes of grains from strategic reserves and the purchase and onward distribution of 60,000 metric tonnes of rice to the millers association.

    Goni  stated that the recent salary increase of 25 per cent and 35 per cent on all consolidated salary structures for federal workers and the 90 per cent subsidy on health costs for federal civil servants registered on health insurance programme.

    All these, he said should be considered by the labour unions and accept the N62, 000 being offered by the Federal Government.

    He said that the light rail commissioned in Abuja was  to relieve transportation cost until the end of the year was a landmark achievements that would cushion the effect of fuel subsidy.

    He said in addition to the freedom of civil servants to engage in agriculture, the Federal Government has approved the inclusion of ICT services for alternate sources of income.

    He said the committee agreed that where major and small businesses were closing down with consequent loss of jobs, the outcome of a new minimum wage should be such that it would not trigger further massive job losses.

    He further said that linking the strike to electricity hikes with the wage determination was not fair to the negotiating parties.

  • Tinubu should have given us Democracy Day gift – NLC

    Tinubu should have given us Democracy Day gift – NLC

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has said President Bola Tinubu should have used the opportunity of the 2024 Democracy Day celebration to harmonize the two minimum wage figures submitted to him and announced a new minimum wage in favour of workers in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Acting President of NLC, Comrade Prince Adewale Adeyanju said this on Wednesday while reacting to President Tinubu’s Democracy Day speech in which he said an executive would soon be sent to the National Assembly (NASS) to enshrine what has been agreed upon to be paid workers as minimum wage.

    Recall that representative of the federal government in the Tripartite Committee had proposed N62,000 as minimum wage, at the end of the sitting of the committee, involving the Organised Private Sector (OPS).

    As Nigeria marked Democracy Day, the NLC said its demand for the new national minimum wage remains N250,000.

    According to Comrade Adeyanju, the union appreciates the President’s commitment to those fine democratic ideals which allowed the work of the Tripartite National Minimum Wage Negotiation Committee to proceed unhindered despite some hiccups.

    “We had expected Mr. President to have used this understanding as one of those who was in the vanguard of the struggle with us around the nation to rescue Nigeria from the hands of the military to harmonize the two figures submitted to him by the Tripartite Committee in favour of workers and masses. It would have been a fitting Democracy Day gift.

    “Our demand still remains N250,000 only and we have not been given any compelling reasons to change this position which we consider a great concession by Nigerian workers during the tripartite negotiation process. We are, therefore, surprised at the submission of Mr President over a supposed agreement.

    “We believe that he may have been misled into believing that there was an agreement with the NLC and TUC. There was none and it is important that we let the President, Nigerians and other national stakeholders understand this immediately to avoid a mix up in the ongoing conversation around the national minimum wage,” he said.

    Adeyanju also noted that the union had not seen a copy of the document submitted to Mr President and it would not accept any doctored document.

    He, however, reaffirmed the union’s belief that the president on whose table the Tripartite Committee’s report presently resides would prepare an Executive Bill which content would reflect the true demand of Nigerian workers.

    “We think that this is an opportunity for him to demonstrate his love for Nigerian workers and masses.

    “That is by shunning the pieces of advice that may be coming from those whose intentions are continuously focused on hurting the poor and struggling workers of Nigeria.

    “Mr President should not allow these individuals and groups to sabotage his promise of lifting Nigerian workers out of poverty,” he said.

    According to him, the president’s advisers obviously did not tell him the truth that the leaders of the trade unions were intimidated and harassed.

    “It is, therefore, important that Mr President understands that we were threatened severally by his operatives perhaps without his consent.

    “Series of media propaganda calculated to intimidate and harass us were, and, are still being waged against the trade unions by senior officials of this government.

    “Fully armed soldiers surrounded us while we were in a negotiation with the government,” he alleged.

    He added the NLC remained assured that the president’s democratic credentials will come to the fore in favour of Nigerian workers and masses.

    He also noted that NLC never agreed on a five-year duration of the minimum wage Act though acknowledged that the president mentioned five years or less.

    According to Adeyanju, the union also agreed that inflation should be pegged at a level for certain amount to be agreed as minimum wage. This is to bring clarity to what the report should contain.

    “Once again, we reiterate that it will be extremely difficult for Nigerian workers to accept any nationa minimum wage figure that approximates to a starvation wage.

    “We cannot be working and yet remain in abject poverty.

    “We seek justice, equity and fairness for all Nigerians and this we hope would also drive the actions of Mr. President who promised a Living Wage to Nigerian workers.

    “This is an opportunity to show that he listens to Nigerians as he promised,” he said.

  • NLC responds to Tinubu’s claim on agreed minimum wage

    NLC responds to Tinubu’s claim on agreed minimum wage

    The organised Labour has reacted to claims by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu that an agreement has been reached on new national minimum wage in his nationwide broadcast to mark Democracy Day.

    In his national broadcast to mark the 2024 Democracy Day in Abuja on Wednesday, Tinubu claimed that a consensus had been reached on the long-debated new minimum wage between the Federal Government and organised labour.

    Tinubu revealed that an executive bill will soon be sent to the National Assembly to formalise the new minimum wage agreement.

    However, in a statement on Wednesday, the acting President of Nigeria Labour Congress, Prince Adewale Adeyanju, said there was no agreement reached by the Tripartite Committee on the National Minimum Wage at the time negotiations ended on Friday, June 7, 2024.

    Adeyanju stated that rather, two figures such as N250,000 from Organised Labour and N62,000 from the government and Organised Private Sector, were arrived at and ought to have been submitted to the President.

    The labour leader asserted that anything to the contrary was not only doctored but won’t be accepted by Labour.

    The statement reads, “The NLC would have expected that the advisers of the President would have told him that we neither reached any agreement with the federal government and the employers on the base figure for a National Minimum Wage nor on its other components.

    “Our demand still remains N250,000, (two hundred and fifty thousand Naira) only and we have not been given any compelling reasons to change this position which we consider a great concession by Nigerian workers during the tripartite negotiation process.

    “We are therefore surprised at the submission of Mr. President over a supposed agreement. We believe that he may have been misled into believing that there was an agreement with the NLC and TUC. There was none and it is important that we let the President, Nigerians and other national stakeholders understand this immediately to avoid a mix-up in the ongoing conversation around the national minimum wage.”

  • Video: Chants of Minimum Wage engulfs Eagle Sq as Nigerians welcome Tinubu

    Video: Chants of Minimum Wage engulfs Eagle Sq as Nigerians welcome Tinubu

    A video clip showing Nigerians chanting minimum wage, Jagaban ha surfaced on social media networks at the Eagle Square on Wednesday.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports in the clip, Nigerians were initially chanting Jagaban, Jagaban, suddenly the chants changed to ‘minimum wage’ as Tinubu waves his hand at the crowd to mark 25 years of uninterrupted democracy in Nigeria.

    WATCH:.

    See Video below:

     

     

  • BREAKING: All set to send bill on minimum wage to NASS – Tinubu

    BREAKING: All set to send bill on minimum wage to NASS – Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu has disclosed that all arrangements have been concluded to send an executive bill to the National Assembly (NASS) to pass a law for a new national minimum wage to be paid workers in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Tinubu made this known in his 2024 Democracy Day national broadcast to Nigerians on Wednesday.

    “We shall soon send our executive bill to the National Assembly to enshrine what has been agreed upon as part of our law for the next five years or less,” President Tinubu said.

    Recall that organised labour in the country and the government have been embroiled in a tussle on an acceptable minimum wage to be paid workers in the country. A tripartite committee was subsequently set up.

    Labour was forced to proceed on a total and indefinite strike, shutting down the national grid, when the government representatives in the committee pegged its recommendation for minimum wage at N60,000.

    Following intervention by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), George Akume, labour called off the strike and a new minimum wage of N62,000 was recommended, while labour cut its demand to N250,000 down from N494,000.

    President Tinubu in his Democracy Day speech said the government negotiated with labour in good faith and with open arms, adding “in the face of labour’s call for a national strike, we did not seek to oppress or crack down on the workers as a dictatorial government would have done.

    “We chose the path of cooperation over conflict. No one was arrested or threatened. Instead, the labour leadership was invited to break bread and negotiate toward a good-faith resolution”.

    Speaking further, Tinubu alleged that there are those taking advantage of the current challenges of the country to undermine the nation’s democracy, while stressing that “where other forms of government impose against the will of the people, democracy aims to make leaders sufficiently humble”.

    He said: “What democracy demands is that we do not resolve differences through force and repression. But we make allowance for the legitimacy of views that differ from our own.

    “Where other forms of government impose against the will of the people, democracy aims to make leaders sufficiently humble that they conduct themselves as servants of the common good, not as viceroys of the narrow interests of the mighty.

    “My dear compatriots, Nigeria faced a decision of untold gravity twenty-five years ago: Whether to veer toward a better destination or continue aimlessly in the fog of dictatorship.

    “We made the right choice then. We must continue with that choice now.

    “As Nigerians, we must remind ourselves that no matter how complicated democracy may be, it is the best form of governance in the long run. We must also be aware that there are those among us who will try to exploit current challenges to undermine, if not destroy, this democracy for which so much has already been given.

    “These people do this not to make things better but to subject all other people and things to their control and dominance until the point that, if you are not counted among their elite, then your life will be small and no longer owned by you.

    “This is the great battle of our day and the major reason we specially celebrate this Democracy day”.

    June 12: Read the full text of President Tinubu’s 2024 Democracy Day speech here

  • Temperamental labour leaders and teachable moments in minimum wage negotiations – By Magnus Onyibe

    Temperamental labour leaders and teachable moments in minimum wage negotiations – By Magnus Onyibe

    All gloves seem to be off as organized labor leaders decided to unbraid Senator George Akume, Secretary to the Government of the Federation, SGF and leader of government’s team negotiating the minimum wage crisis with the organized labor leaders after they practically shut down our country last monday, 3rd June.

    As the verbal exchange between the leaders of labor and government rages on and Nigerians are lapping up all the drama, what seems to have been lost on the nation is the gravity of and dire consequences of shutting down the national grid by the obviously enraged and therefore rampaging labor activists that were intent on bringing government down to its knees via a forced lock-down.

    Has anyone considered a scenario whereby those that forcefully took control of critical and sensitive assets of our country are non state actors who have taken up arms against our country?

    Think of a scenario whereby those that switched off our electricity grid were religious insurgents-Boko Haram, ISWAP that are holding sway in the northern region or sovereign state agitators like IPOB, ECN in the eastern flanks and Oodua Peoples Congress in the south west axis of our country or environmental rights activists like Niger Delta militants in the treasure trove of Nigeria?

    Our country got very close to that apocalystic  situation on 3rd June when organized labor embarked on industrial action to enforce their demand for minimum wage increase.

    At the risk of being tagged an alarmist , the scenario described above is one of the teachable moments for me in the minimum wage increase agitation by the organized labor pitched against the federal government that is making frantic efforts to manage the crisis for an equitable solution.

    To put things in perspective, it is apropos that we reflect on the aetiology of the minimum wage crisis.

    The first to literally draw blood in the war of words was the SGF, Senator Akume whose verbal umbrage was triggered by the reported loss of some lives in hospitals country wide when labor activists forced their way into the national electricity grid to switch off power supply nationwide.  That resulted in reported loss of lives of sick people that were on life support gadgets in hospitals, even as medical doctors that could have helped save lives were stopped from going into the hospitals to attend to patients. Ideally when strikes are called , those on essential duties are not prevented from working.

    It is believed that the rampaging labor activists enforcing the industrial action that was called by the organized labor in Nigeria to force the hands of goverment to increase minimum wage from N30,000 to N500,000, which was the intial demand, but currently scaled down to N250,000, did cause avoidable loss of not only income,but the shut down resulted  in loss of lives.

    Although looses are still be counted, the two days shut down of our country stretched from the bureacracy to market/economic space all the way down to the airspace such as airports that were also shut down by the labor activists who were bent on causing massive disruption of the magnitude that would shake government.

    Obviously, unbemused about the catatrosphic consequences of the strike action that resulted in a practical lock down of our country for at least 48 hours , the SGF accused labor leaders of economic sabotage and characterized their crime as treasonble felony.

    The SGF, Senator Akume, reportedly expressed his displeasure when the executives from the National Council of Christian Association of Nigeria,CAN visited him last thursday,June 6.

    Below is how an obviously piqued SGF expressed his displeasure:

    “Nowhere in the world has labour ever tampered with the national grid. It is treason! Treasonable felony is economic sabotage; you don’t do that,” .

    “We are trying to rebuild the economy. The president is picking it up, and they want to destroy it. Of what use is that to all of us? That is not the way.”

    He concluded by saying:

    “It is not that we are not working. We are working, and that is why we implemented the N35,000 wage, which is more than the minimum wage,” he said.

    “There are buses ready to be distributed, and soon, rice and other essentials will be available.”

    Not taking the SGF’s umbraiding lying low, the leaders of organized labor have gone ballistic by pushing back via their mocking of the SGF by alleging that politicians , which is the ‘tribe’ that the SGF belongs are the real ecomomic saboteurs:

    “The SGF we are sure clearly knows those whose actions are treasonable and sabotages our economy. Those who loot our treasury around the country, those who divert public resources meant for hospitals and schools; those who are involved in foreign exchange roundtripping; padding of budgets and inflating contracts including those who steal trillions of naira in the name of subsidy are the real economic saboteurs who commit treasonable felony.

    “These people are in costly agbada and drive in convoys all around the nation occupying the corridors of power and not innocent workers who are not slaves but chose to withdraw their services because of the inhuman treatment meted on them by the government”.

    The thirty six (36) state governors that are leading the components of the country at the subnational level, all of which together constitute Nigerian nation, who felt like , to borrow a popular local cliche, that their hair was being shaven behind their back; in the sense that a national minimum wage which would be binding on them to pay workers at the state level was being discussed and decided without their input,  had to join the fray.

    In their statement they expressed the following concern:

    “The Nigeria Governors’ Forum is in agreement that a new minimum wage is due. The Forum also sympathises with labour unions in their push for higher wages.

    “However, the Forum urges all parties to consider the fact that the minimum wage negotiations also involve consequential adjustments across all cadres, including pensioners. The NGF cautions parties in this important discussion to look beyond just signing a document for the sake of it; any agreement to be signed should be sustainable and realistic.

    “All things considered, the NGF holds that the N60,000 minimum wage proposal is not sustainable and can not fly. It will simply mean that many states will spend all their FAAC allocations on just paying salaries with nothing left for development purposes. In fact, a few states will end up borrowing to pay workers every month. We do not think this will be in the collective interest of the country, including workers.”

    Expectedly , the governors have also  become targets of the fiery darts and missiles of the angry labor unions.

    They wrote:-

    “We do believe that governors have acted in bad faith.lt is unheard of for such a statement to be issued to the world in the middle of an ongoing negotiation. It is certainly in bad taste.

    “As for the veracity of their claim, nothing can be further from the truth as FAAC allocations have since moved from N700 billion to N1.2 trillion( thanks to subsidy petrol and naira subsidy removal by president Tinubu) making the governments extremely rich at the expense of the people.”

    Furthermore they bellowed:

    “We are not fixated with figures but value.

    Those who argue that moving national minumum wage from N30,000 to N60,000 is sufficiently good enough miss the point.”

    As the popular aphorism goes ‘a hungry man, is an angry man’.

    There is no arguement about the fact that Nigerian workers have been negatively impacted by the reform initiatives of the incumbent administration.

    Even President Tinubu acknowledges that fact, hence he provided an interim remedial measure, which is the Federal Government award of  N35,000 (strangely it is not being talked about very much ) as extra bonus on the N30,000 minumum wage to workers pending when the amount to replace the one that has recently expired, is agreed upon.

    All over the world, labor union leaders have the reputation of being feisty,fiery and ferocious.

    For instance , in the

    United States of America,USA, the highly influential and powerful United Auto Workers , UAW have been known to engage politicians in hot exchange of words when demanding for wage increase.

    The last showdown between UAW and their employers was in 2023 when they were demanding for 40% wage increase. Owing to the fact that the union is very influential and pack a significant voting punch, the current President of the US, Mr Joe Biden joined them in the picket lines and backed their agitation for pay increase.

    Unlike in the US where the private sector is often the largest employer of labor , in Nigeria, government is the highest employer of labor, so strike actions are often taken against the private sector employers of labor which is a tell tale sign of the abysmal level of industrialization in our country.

    In the United Kingdom,UK, Baroness Margaret Thatcher, who Britons aptly tagged the Iron Lady owing to how she was able to tame the very vocal and influential labor unions, that could significantly influence the outcomes of political parties elections and as they were holding British politicians to a ransome, was hounded until her passage on 8th April 2013 and she was even disrespected by labor activists during her funeral.

    From the narrative above, labor activists all over the world are known to be impetulent and tempestous.

    Having put things in context, to give readers the opportunity to make a fair assessment of the crisis triggered by the negotiqtion for a new minimum wage characterized by hot verbal exchanges between the SGF and organized labor currently happening in Nigeria: and the carpeting of governors by labor leaders, after the governors forum reminded the negotiators that state governments may not be able to pay the wage being demanded; let us examine the veracity of the accusation leveled by the SGF against the labor leaders that they have committed treasonable felony by switching off the national electricity grid which he pointed out as having not been done anywhere in the world.

    On the other hand ,what also needs to be tested for veracity by being put in the crucible of truth are the charges against politicians at both federal and sub national levels by the labor leaders who are claiming that they did no wrong by plunging the nation into total darkness to drive home their demand for increase in minimum wage for workers and then accussed politicians of being the real economic saboteurs.

    So, l posed the question of whether the switching off of electricity from the national grid was a treasonable felony using  Artificial Intelligence, AI tool, and below is the response:

    “Labor unions do not have the right to switch off the national electricity grid as a form of strike protest. While labor unions have the right to peaceful strike actions, sabotaging or tampering with critical infrastructure like the national electricity grid is illegal and potentially dangerous.

    Such actions could lead to serious consequences, including:

    – Endangering public safety

    – Causing widespread economic disruption

    – Damaging equipment and infrastructure

    – Violating labor laws and regulations

    Instead, labor unions typically engage in peaceful strike actions like:

    – Work stoppages

    – Picketing

    – Rallies

    – Negotiations

    Unions may also explore other creative and lawful tactics to draw attention to their demands, like social media campaigns or public outreach efforts.”

    In light of the forgoing, the SGF is right in his allegation that organized labor might have committed treasonable felony by switching off the national electricity grid because it has had grave consequences on the economy of Nigeria and lives of Nigerians.

    Given the reality above, should the ongoing negotiation between governmemt led by a justifiably miffed SGF and labor leaders fail to attain success before the expiration of the one week period of forbearance granted by organized labor when it suspended the strike for one week which ends tuesday 12, June 2024; in order to prevent a re-occurence of the treasonable felony offenses that occured on 3rd June ,should government not take steps to protect our critical assests like the national electricity grid, telephone networks, water reservoirs, airports and sea ports amongst many other such critical infrastructure to make them as impregnable as fortknox to protect them from being easily breached as had happened on 3rd June?

    The second teachable moment from the minimum wage negotiation to me is whether the labor leaders are correct in labeling politicians as the ‘real’ saboteurs when they made the statement.

    As l have always advocated, and in alignment with the title of my column which is also what l titled my latest book: “Leading From The Streets”, mass media platforms are sort of public opionon courts where everyone is free to act as litigants and appellants, as the case may be.

    Put succinctly,we all have the right to present our cases in the courts of public opinion as lawyers do in courts of law.

    After pleading our case, it is left for the  people of Nigeria, particularly those leading from the streets to make the decision in the way that judges do in law courts.

    That is one way in which we will be putting the masses who are Leading From The Streets in the centre-point of leadership.

    Ideally,that is the way it is supposed to be as it would be in consonnance with the tenets of and in alignment with the definition of democracy which is: government of the people,by the people and for the people.

    Arising from the above, and in the spirit of putting leadership in the hands of the people, it is only proper that we scrutinize the allegation by labor leaders that politicians are the ‘real’ economic saboteurs.

    Going by the fact that Mr Ahmed Idris ,a suspended Accountant General of the Federation who is a public servant and not politician was arrested and araigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC for allegedly stealing a whooping N109 billion naira from government treasury between february and december 2021,the allegation against politicians is rendered spurious. That is because the claim by labor leaders that politicians are the ‘real’ economic saboteurs is disputable.

    One is also curious to know if our labor leaders  are also implying that civil servants are the ‘fake’ saboteurs, if politicians are the ‘real’ saboteurs ?

    Before Ahmed Idris, another Accountant General  of the Federation that Idris suceeded in office is Mr Jonah Otunla.

    He is another civil servant, not a politician  who served as Accountant General of the Federation between 2011 and 2015 and was also alleged to have stolen about N26 billion from federal government treasury.

    But he refunded about N6.3 billion after being arrested by the EFCC and he has been in court trying to make a case that having made a refund of some of the looted funds,he has been discharged of all criminal and civil liabilities.

    How about Abdulrasheed Maina, that was a public servant heading the defunt pension reform department of government?

    He was given the mandate to sanitize the pension fund space that had become a cesspit of corruption but he relooted what he had recovered from looters and was convicted in november 2021 for stealing 2 billion naira belonging to pensioners after a two-year trial.

    As adumbrated by one Sanusi Muhammad who in a piece published in Trojan News of 3rd december 2023, wherein he identified  a litany of acts of economic sabotage via financial corruption perpetrated,not only by politicians,but also by civil servants,it is clear that civil servants are not absolved from being economic saboteurs.

    In fact from available records, civil servants are as culpable as politicians that they are pointing their fingers at.

    So, is this a case of the kettle calling the pot black?

    In any case, is it not telling that the indicted and convicted civil servants highligted earlier are members of the ‘tribe’ of the organized labor comprising of the umbrella body of civil servants-the Nigeria Labor Congress ,NLC and Trade Union Congress,TUC headed by Joe Ajaero and  Festus Osifo who have been voiceferous in tagging politicians at both national and subnational levels as economic saboteurs?

    It is trite, but it is worth recalling the fact that the indicted and convicted civil servants are actually colleagues of the labor leaders that are expressing righteous indignation.

    The truth and sad reality is that we are all swimming in the cesspool of corruption that equates with economic sabotage, so there is no need expressing righteuors indignation of only condemning corruption when agitating for pay rise.

    How about our labor leaders becoming more innovative by creating anti corruption vanguards/squads  in government institutions to nip the crime in the bud?

    As the conventional wisdom goes.

    ‘Corruption steals from us all’.

    Is it not hypocritical that the Institutions listed below and managed by civil servants are ridden with corruption?

    They range from the Niger Delta Development Commission , NDDC, Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund,NSTIF, to Universal Basic Education Commission,UBEC and Nigerian National Petroleun Company, NNPC , Niger Delta Amnesty Funds, as well as the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN .

    It is dishonorable that all of the public agencies listed above have been associated with humungous fraud in the past several years.

    Let it be reiterated that they are being led by public/civil servants who have been engaging in economic sabotage.

    These are crimes which they try to cover up by making incredulous claims such as termites eating up invoices and snakes swallowing missing funds.

    Again , is it not rather hypocritical that there is no evidence that labor leaders reprimanded , condemned how much more sanctioned in any shape or form the referenced economic saboteurs within their ranks that have been indicted or convicted?

    Yet they are lambasting politicians for rejecting their initial scandalous demand for N500,000 as minimum wage for workers instead of focusing more on how the currently very low productivity base in our country could be boosted through investements in infrastructure such as electricity energy generating projects like  Geometric Power providing electricity solution in Aba,Abia state, Innoson Vehicles Manufacturer in Nnewi , Anambra state as well as Dangote refinery in Lekki, Lagos etc, to facilitate industrialization of our country that woud led to the creation of more jobs and prosperity for workers.

    To be clear, one is not holding brief for the members of the political class, or in any way trying to absolve them of their culpabilty in corrupt practices that expose our dear native land to economic sabotage. But l am simply drawing attention to the fact that the allegations by labor leaders that politicians are the ‘real’ saboteurs is spurious and malicious  because it is a case of the kettle calling the pot black.

    In my view, the vitriolic exchanges are unhelpful and mischevious and at best diversionary.

    Instead of chasing the shadows which the grandstanding by organized labor amounts to, they should invest more energy in identifying and addressing the primary cause/causses of the spike in the cost of living of which one of them is food insecurity and the other is due to ongoing economic reforms.

    That brings me to the 3rd teachable moment which revolves around the law governing national minimum wage negotiations.

    It would need to be reviewed because as it currently stands it negates the spirit and letter of true federalism since it empowers the federal government to pass national minimum wage , precluding state governments from fixing their minimum wage based on the resources available in the economy to support low or high wage.

    For instance, would it not be foolhardy for Lagos state that earns Internally Generated Revenue , IGR in excess of N260 billion annually pay the same minimum wage to workers in Zamfara, Ekiti or Ebonyi states with little or no economic  activities from which revenue could be derived as tax?

    Obviously the high cost of living in Lagos ( food, housing ,transportation etc) which is the economic heart beat of Nigeria, can not be compared to that of people living in the aforementioned states in the hinterlands of Nigeria which are rural with much lower costs . So it would be understandable if the workers there are paid less. Is uniform minimum wage nationwide not an aberration of autonomy which  defines true federalism?

    For instance , would US law makers pass a law that the minimum wage in the highly industrialized and populous states of California and New York should be the same paid to workers workers in less urbanized states such as Mississippi, Lousiana or New Mexico?

    The resounding answer is no!

    That is because since the size of their economes are much smaller and weak, they would not find the funds to pay salaries as high as workers are paid in California and New York states that have robust economic bases.

    A similar comparism can be made locally between Lagos, Rivers, Akwa lbom,Delta  and Ogun states that are financially bouyant versus, Ekiti, Zamfara and Ebonyi states that are barely surviving on the lean revenue from FAAC , as they generate little or no revenue internally.

    Clearly, fixing a national minimum wage that is binding on all the component states  that constitute Nigeria would vitiate the concept of autonomy that is the underguarding principle of democracy and which would contradict the concept and practice of true federalism which is central to the practice of presidential system of government that is in operation in our country.

    Arising from the above, the national mininum wage provision in section 4 of the 1999 constition of Nigeria would appear to be an aberration or a contradition of the concept and practice of true federalism which our nation prides herself as practicing.

    As such,that provision for fixing a national minimum wage in section 4 of the 1999 constitution would need to be revisited with a view to tweaking or expunging it to reflect the dynamics of autonomy intrinsinc in the practice of true federalism as it obtains in the US from where we borrowed the presidential system.

    There are several other teachable moments that one has gleaned from the ongoing minimum wage umpasse that my good friend Segun Adeniyi , the editorial board chairman of Thisday newspaper has titled: “ Minimum Wage and Maximum Rage” in his column last week,but time and space would not permit  my laying all of them out in this piece.

    Be that as it may, inflation in Nigeria, especially of the food hue has hit an all time high which is in excess of 40%.

    Obviously the N30,000 minimum wage plus the N35,000 hardship/bonus pay introduced by President Tinubu to cushion the negative fall out of the ongoing socio-economic reforms has not been good enough antidote to the current galloping inflation.

    What elementary economics teaches us is that inflation sets in when a lot of money is chasing few goods.

    Bearing that in mind, what needs to be done, in my humble opinion is increase the productive/production base of our economy.

    Of course one is aware of dollar scarcity and exit of some multinational mamufacturing firms with low capital threshold from our country.

    So, one is not being too bullish about improvements in manufactured products being abundant until the volatility in the financial sector particularly with reepect to foreign exchange rate and crude oil sales are better managed.

    But targeting food inflation that has been skybound,it appears to me that one of the ways to tackle the hardship being experienced by workers would be to boost food security which is currently like a mirrage in light of the high level of insecuriy driven by non state actors-religious insurgents, bandits and separatists/ soveriegn state agitators that have heightened insecurity and made made farming either as a profession or vocation very difficult,if not impossible.

    Since professional farming is currently highly risky in light of how Boko Haram, a couple of years ago gruesomely beheaded some farmers in Sokoto state who defiled their order not to go to farm, vocational farming in gardens around the homes of workers remains a good option to augument food supply that is fast drying up.

    Therefore, a pertinent question to ask is: are our labor leaders considering a solution to the hardships from the prism highlighted above?

    Why must money or wage increase be the only optics from which solution to current hardships is being considered?

    Are our labor leaders not aware that even if the N250,000 minimum wage that they are agitating for is agreed,in less than 3 months, all things being equal, inflation would catch up with the wage increase even if it is as high as the N500,000 that is their original demand?

    My humble counsel would be that workers should weigh all the options available and find a middle ground,even as l urge them to regard government as partners in progress not adversaries as evidenced by the barbs that they are currently being traded  with government functionaries, including those in the two branches-executive and legislative.

    Even government afficionados at both national and subnational levels have not escaped the tongue lashing by organized labor operatives, which is unfortunate because it is making our beloved country look like a theatre of the absurd to onlookers,both locally and internationally.

    How antagonizing the negotiators and excalating  the crisis would bring succur to the workers bearing the brunt remains unfathomable to me.

    On the part of government , restoring security by reining in the outlaws  that are putting lives at risk and making farming difficult, if not imposible should be priotized.

    One is assuming  that President Tinubu is on top of how to resolve the intolerable insecurity issues in our country, and positive result is yet to manifest in that sector, probably because he is rejiging the nation’s security strategy that has been  driven from a kinetic approach which entails applyiing sheer military force as solution.

    But hope for a respite seems to be on the horizon given that government is throwing in a mix of both kinetic and non kinetic strategies (which is about engagement with the society in more scientific methods) such as carrots and sticks approach to get to the route cause of the anti-social bevaviors manifesting as the menance currently hobbling the growth, development and progress of our beloved nation as well as prosperity of Nigerians.

    To make our country great,our labor leaders must transit from being mere workers to problem solvers by becoming a source of innovation and a bastion of productive workforce that would propel our country into ultimately attaining a level of human, food and  energy security that have been the dream of the masses which our leaders have been struggling to make manifest.

     

    Magnus Onyibe,an entrepreneur,public policy analyst ,author,democracy advocate,development strategist,alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,Tufts University, Massachusetts,USA and a former commissioner in Delta state government, sent this piece from Lagos, Nigeria.

    To continue with this conversation and more, please visit www.magnum.ng

  • BREAKING: Labour opens up on resuming strike tomorrow

    BREAKING: Labour opens up on resuming strike tomorrow

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has declared organised labour will not resume strike tomorrow (Tuesday) to further press the government for increase in minimum wage paid workers in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports NLC President, Joe Ajaero made this known on Monday at a labour conference organised by the International Labour Organisation in Geneva, Switzerland.

    Recall that organised labour relaxed for one-week the indefinite nationwide strike declared last Monday to allow continuation of negotiations.

    Labour had declared an indefinite nationwide strike, midnight of June 2, to press home its demands of  non conclusion of national minimum wage fixing and non reversal of hike in electricity tariff.

    Labour relaxed the indefinite strike, following the resolution by the federal government to offer more than the N60,000, it put forward to the tripartite committee.

    The government had presented a N62,000 minimum wage to labour, following renewed negotions. However, labour had pegged it demand on N250,000.

    Speaking in Geneva, Ajaero ruled out labour will resume the strike on Tuesday, stressing that organised labour is waiting for the pronouncement of President Bola Tinubu on the matter.

    “The tripartite committee submitted two figures to the President. Government and employers proposed N62,000 while labour proposed N250,000. We are waiting for the decision of the President. Our National Executive Council (NEC) will deliberate on the new figure when it is out.

    “We cannot declare strike now because the figures are with the President. We will wait for the President’s decision. During the tenure of the immediate past President, the figure that was proposed to him was N27,000 by the tripartite committee but he increased it to N30,000.

    “We are hopeful that this President will do the right thing. The President had noted that the difference between N62,000 and N250,000 is a wide gulf,” Ajaero said.

  • NLC told to consider realistic, sustainable minimum wage

    NLC told to consider realistic, sustainable minimum wage

    The Committee of Youths on Mobilisation and Sensitisation (CYMS), has called on the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), to align its minimum wage demand with governments’ ability to pay sustainably.

    Its Director-General, Mr Obinna Nwaka, made the call during a thanksgiving service to mark the end of the 2024 Youths’ Week at the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion, Nyanya, Abuja on Sunday.

    The theme of the thanksgiving service was, “Promotion of Peaceful Coexistence and Religious Co-creation in our Nation”.

    Nwaka said that considering the current economic challenges in the country, “the federal and state governments may struggle to pay, if the amount is unrealistic.”

    According to him, the N250,000 demand as minimum wage by the NLC for workers is not sustainable, considering the country’s current financial situation.

    He pointed out that Nigeria is still recovering from the economic difficulties of the past administration and warned against making promises that could destabilise the nation.

    He also argued that a substantial salary increase would be insufficient if critical infrastructure and public services remain inadequate.

    He advised labour to also pay attention to addressing broader systemic issues rather than focusing solely on wage increase.

    “We are in the same shoes. There are other areas; labour for example can advocate for good governance; it’s not just all about minimum wage,” he added.

    He called on the NLC to channel their efforts towards advocating for improved healthcare and education services, including the provisions of critical infrastructure.

    This, he believes, could have a more significant impact on the quality of life of the Nigerian workers.

    “Even if they are paying you 500,000 Naira as a salary, it will not be enough, if a healthcare facility is not there; if infrastructure is not there; and if we cannot even send our children to a public school.

    “The NLC should focus on motivating the government to invest in these essential sectors,” he said.

    Earlier, the minister in charge, Rev. Samuel Labuja, said that the conversations, throughout the youths’ week, reflected the nation’s quest for unity and development.

    Labuja advised the youths to maximise their potential and invest in self-reliance ventures, as against depending on white-collar jobs.

    “The youths should understand that we can’t live together without peace, and the best we can do to make the nation move forward is to live in peace.

    “Youths should learn not to depend on salary alone. They should make use of their God-given talent to earn more resources.

    “Whatever you are doing, do it well to the glory of God to earn a living,” he said.

    On his part, the Church’s Youths President, Mr Bobby Odia, described the week-long youths’ conference as impactful.

    Odia particularly said that the youths, as leaders of tomorrow, have understood the need to contribute their resources towards the development of the country.

    “We just celebrated the 2024 Youths’ Week with the theme, “Stand Firm and Take Charge”, and for us to be the future of tomorrow, we have to utilise our energy for the good of our nation,” he said.