Tag: NLC

  • NLC reiterates position on removal of petrol subsidies

    NLC reiterates position on removal of petrol subsidies

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) has reiterated its position on the removal of petrol subsidies, saying that it has not changed.

    The NLC President, Mr Ayuba Wabba, said this in a statement signed and made available to newsmen on Saturday in Abuja.

    It would be recalled that Mr Festus Keyamo,(SAN) Minister of State for Labour and Employment had tasked the NLC to come out clean on its stand on the Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate, Peter Obi’s decision to remove fuel subsidy, if elected.

    Keyamo is also the Campaign Spokesperson of the presidential campaign of All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Wabba said that the NLC had painstaking processes and articulated a Nigerian Workers’ Charter of Demands which the organised labour would be using to engage the political process.

    According to him, the move was in furtherance of the avowed position of the NLC on issues-based campaign in the run up to the 2023 General Elections.

    “A major demand in the Nigerian Workers Charter of Demands is that our local public refineries must work. We have also demanded that we must stop 100 per cent importation of refined petroleum products.

    “The NLC and indeed the labour movement in Nigeria had over many decades been vehemently consistent that the only way to address the issue of the so-called petrol subsidies is to get our refineries to work.

    “The logic is very simple: it is not economical to buy from abroad at very expensive prices a product that a country like ours can easily produce at home,” he said.

    Wabba added that, at the heart of their demand on the management of Nigeria’s mineral resources, especially the downstream petroleum sub-sector was the issue of Production Economy.

    He said that the congress believed that the rescue of Nigeria from the current path of Consumption Economy to Production Economy was the only way to resolve Nigeria’s economic nightmares of massive depletion of scarce foreign exchange reserve.

    Wabba said this would resolve the continuous devaluation of the Naira; significant jobs reduction, poverty and downturn in the living standards of the people.

    “In a determined effort to popularise the positions in the Nigerian Workers Charter of Demands, the NLC and TUC at the behest of the Labour Party on Monday and Tuesday hosted a National Retreat of the leadership cadres in our movement.

    “At the retreat, the Labour Party and Organised Labour in Nigeria adopted and mainstreamed the Workers Charter of Demands into the Manifesto of the Labour Party.

    “This is in line with our persuasion that issue-based campaign anchored on the manifesto of political parties should drive Nigeria’s political process.

    “If any political party goes around saying that they plan to sell our refineries, remove subsidies,  they should be ready to defend such stance to Nigerians at the campaigns, ’’he added.

    He said that, the NLC, Organised Labour, and Labour Party position had not changed. “It only got amplified,” he said.

  • Hope amid desolation – By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    Hope amid desolation – By Sonnie Ekwowusi

    Unmistakably the battle line for 2023 Presidential election has been drawn among three competing groups-the Obi-dients, BAT and Atikulation- even though it appears Atikulation, which is still battling to survive the phenomenal internal squabble threatening its very soul, is yet to throw down the gage. The Obi-dients affirm again and again that theirs is not a political party: theirs is a mass movement comprising the country’s vibrant young people that constitute the bulk of the Nigerian population. Theirs is a mass movement of the oppressed, University students left to rot at home, ASUU, the hungry, the sick, the dying, the suffering, pensioners, the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), men and women who have not been eking out a simple living in the last seven years. The aforesaid categories of Nigerians come from a variegated bloodstream of Nigerian society. They are united in their unalterable resolution and demand for a breakaway from the ruinous pre-existing legal order. They are demanding for a creation of a new Nigerian order where work culture and serviceable public ethics would guarantee hard work, honesty, diligence, meritocracy and human flourishing.

    Unfortunately we live in a time in which brainlessness and stupidity are being assumed into politics. Most Nigerians have lost faith in the Nigerian project. Walk into a beer parlour, for instance, and say you feel optimistic about the future, and you may be asked to vamoose on account of your reveling in an uncommon utopia. That is how bad things have become in Nigeria. With its separation from reason and noble ideals, the banal politics we play in Nigeria finds itself unable to distinguish the good from the ugly. Certainly a political culture that creates perennial loopholes for flourishing incompetence, parasitism, official corruption, graft and conversion of the people’s commonwealth into personal fiefdom calls for an immediate change. Merely casting hope in an empty democracy run by brainless men to provide the much-needed instant miracle to improve the living condition in Nigeria is to live in a fool’s paradise.

    The truth is bitter. But the bitterness ingrained in the truth does not alter the truth. The truth remains the truth even if it is hotly contested. Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. We should reflect on the fact that BAT has publicly vowed to continue the perfidious legacies- official corruption, nepotism, insecurity of lives and property, islamization of Nigeria, incestuous narcissism, stone-headedness, cluelessness-of President Buhari. Ask BAT about national rebirth they would mumble something to the effect that it is their turn to rule Nigeria or they will throw their overflowing colourful agbada attire here and there in a way that suggests that insanity has taken a permanent residence in the land. It beats the imagination that amid the grounding, ambushing, conquest and occupation of Nigeria by the Jihadists, and, of course, amid the endless killing and persecutions of Nigerian Christians, BAT is remorselessly fielding a Muslim-Muslim team in the Presidential race. This is evidence that BAT has no respect for the teeming population of Nigerian Christians. Another evidence is that BAT has never condemned the escalating ethno-religious killings in the country. For instance, BAT finds nothing wrong in the recent massacre of innocent church worshippers at St. Francis Catholic in Owo, Ondo State by terrorists. After Deborah Samuel was murdered by fanatical Muslim students and the whole country was thrown into mourning, BAT did not condemn the murder. When a member of the Vigilante Group was stoned to death and set ablaze by Muslim extremists for allegedly insulting Prophet Mohammed or an Imam, BAT also kept mum. BAT did not publicly condemn the Abuja-Kaduna-train bombing and abduction which occurred on March 28 2022. Amid complete collapse of State security architecture, the terrorists have laid monumental siege not only in Kaduna State but in Niger, Bornu and Nasarawa States murdering, maiming, raping, intimidating, and terrorizing their victims unabated. Yet BAT has not uttered a word in condemnation. Instead BAT is busy saying that it is their turn to be crowned the President of Nigeria. The politics of BAT is not the politics imbue with ideas but the politics of entitlement.

    This is BAT for you. It is obvious that BAT lacks a sense of justice. It is clear that if elected President BAT would make a disaster President. Electing BAT as President of Nigeria would trigger off more Islamic terrorist attacks in different parts of Nigeria. By his action and inaction, BAT has shown that they are in sympathy with the Islamic terrorists. Can you believe what I am about to say now?. Can you believe how debased the political culture of BAT is?. How broken is their politics? How intimidating and barbaric their political campaigns are?. Ostensibly unable to match the Obi-dients’ wisdom; Obi-dients’ sustained mass mobilization of the people; Obi-dients’ call to a return to the fundamental values that once made this country a great country, BAT has recently resolved to, among other things, threaten the lives of key Obi-dient figures on social media. They also intend to threaten the family members of the Obi-dients so that they would be compelled to abandon the Obi-dient movement. Keyamo is already issuing some violent and intimidating statements against political opponents. Also the DSS and security agents are likely to be recruited to go after key members of the Obi-dient movement. They will likely link some Obi-dients with IPOB and thereafter bring trumped up charges against them in order to arrest them and charge them to court, if possible. Many Obi-dients are likely to be arrested and falsely accused of financing IPOB. The businesses of some Obi-dients and the businesses of their respective family members are likely to be threatened as well. They may recruit the EFCC to intimate the donors to and fund- raisers of the Obi-dient movement. It is not unlikely that they are also planning to use prominent members of BAT to intensify their false accusations against the Obi-dients through the electronic, print media and on social media too. They are not unlikely to use the Igbo language to link Peter Obi to IPOB in order to call for his arrest. Already Malami is threatening that Peter Obi might be prosecuted for allegedly receiving financial sponsorship from abroad. At the moment they are compiling a list of key Obi-dients who must be stopped before they use the Obi-dient movement to stop BAT. Already instruction has come from the top that public advert spaces should be denied the Obi-dients in Lagos so that they would not use them to advertise the Obi-dient political campaigns when the political campaigns kick off on September 28.

    With BAT in power, there would never be a separate place for Christianity in the public order except on the terms defined and dictated by BAT. Truth would become a matter of indifference. And peace would disintegrate when truth becomes a matter of indifference or a purely interior sentiment. Thus peace would not be that “tranquility of order” that St. Augustine had postulated wherein the individual persons saw and understood the truth of things and agreed to live accordingly. Peace would be built on the supposition that no truth existed or could exist.

    This is why you and I must fight now for the future of our country. The Nigerian nationalist taught us many lessons. They taught us that freedom is a cause worth fighting for. “Give me liberty or give me death,” said Patrick Henry. So many brave country men and women of ours have died in the pursuit of freedom. As we see threats to freedom and those ideals which our nationalists lived for and died for, we need to fight to reclaim our freedom. Even though Nigerians have lost faith in President Buhari and the APC they have not lost faith in themselves. We will defend Nigerian values, rights, and freedoms. We will not let President Buhari ruin this great country. We can retake our Nigeria from Buhari in February 2023. But before that can happen, BAT is advised to eschew bitterness, violence and intimidation. Violence has never been used to solve the problems of mankind. Violence is a recipe for anarchy. We don’t want anarchy that could stall the elections next year. BAT should play the politics of ideas not the politics of violence and intimidation of political opponents. INEC must jealously guard its independence and its impartiality.

    INEC must conduct a free and fair Presidential election to prevent the Nigerian young, majority of whom would be monitoring the election, to attempt to set Nigeria ablaze. President Buhari has publicly said that he is looking forward to handing over power to his fellow BAT member. This is probably why some of the 19 newly-nominated Resident Election Commissioners (RECs) Are members of the APC. SERAP and others are calling for inclusion and transparency in the nomination of RECs. He who pays the piper dictates the tune. If the Presidency is the sole nominator and financier of INEC’s RECs it means that the RECs are under control and bidding of the President. This is why SERAP and others are saying that the power of nominating the RECs should be taken away from the Presidency and given to an impartial and independent body comprising Nigerians from different cultural, religious and political spectrum. Therefore the National Assembly, political parties and Nigerian stakeholders should reject 19 newly-appointed (RECs) so that the 2023 election results will not be compromised.

    Finally, it is true that the day is dying but we must be hopeful. We must be optimistic. The rock rejected by them would soon become the corner rock. A rock that will make them stumble, a solid rock on which foundation a flourishing Nigeria will be built. So, be ready to vote wisely in February 2023. This is the only way you can account for the hope that is in you. And say to those whose hearts are frightened: be strong, fear not. Do not return evil for evil, reviling for reviling; but on the contrary, bless those who oppress you, for the eyes of the Almighty are upon the just, the face of the Lord is against those who concoct evil and his ears are not open to their prayer. With the sun rising from the East and setting in the West, North and South, streams of living water will flow out in abundance for all; the lame will leap like a stag; streams will burst forth in the desert, and rivers in the steppe. The burning stand will become pools and the thirst ground springs of drinkable water.

  • Labour’s ability to agitate for Workers’ Welfare has nose-dived, says Macaulay

    Labour’s ability to agitate for Workers’ Welfare has nose-dived, says Macaulay

    A former Secretary to the Delta State Government (SSG), Comrade Ovuozourie Macaulay has blamed the inability of labour to agitate for the workers’ welfare on general infrastructure decay and lack of development.

    Besides, he claimed that labour leaders have been incapacitated by selfish penchants and the quest to use the labour movement as platform to liberate themselves economically.

    Speaking on the heels of the 31st anniversary of the creation of Delta State, the pioneer chairman of the State Council of Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), argued that the present day labour movement was characterized mainly by armpit file-carrying leaders.

    According to him, the current labour leaders go cap in hand, with files in their armpit, from one government office to another begging for assistance.

    “Today whether we like it or not labour has become a parastatal of government and that is why it is difficult to go out on a true agitation; because morally and in true conscience you cannot face a man that has just given you a car or money to bury your mother or father and want to condemn his government. It is not possible.

    “In our time the agitation was about the workers and that was why it was easy because you can threaten the government and say this is what we want for the workers; if it says no, whatever it sees, it takes. So, it is easy to manage the workers themselves; when you tell them tomorrow don’t come to work, labour has spoken, they will obey because they know it’s in their interest.

    “The only thing I can tell people is that, if you know you have not liberated yourself from the shackles of poverty, don’t go into the labour movement to liberate your family.

    Macaulay who was also a former chairman of the State Chapter of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), contended that the ability to agitate for workers rights has gone down to the extent that It seemed like it was now every man for himself.

    This, he stressed, explained why when some workers are corrupt, adding that if you do not want your workers to be corrupt, pay them well and motivate the workers with other auxiliaries that go with the salary.

    “A worker in Guinness or Shell would not want to steal because he is looking forward to a robust retirement benefit. He is looking forward to what his children get every year, what he gets for his annual vacation, what he gets for medical.

    “So he has no reason to be corrupt because if his child or wife is sick there is a hospital where he pays no bill. He has an annual leave that can take him and his family on vacation.

    “But when you have a worker that is confined to only his salary, he is bound to be tempted to accept gratification from somebody. The situation we are in today; you may blame the labour leaders but you also blame the system. It’s on both sides and this is not peculiar to Delta State.

    “So I think the lack of development in this country has been responsible, and it is one of the root causes of the high level of corruption in the civil service.

  • NLC seeks downward review of media operating licences

    NLC seeks downward review of media operating licences

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has urged the federal government to urgently review downwards the operating licences of media organisations in the country in response to the prevailing harsh economic situation.

    This is contained in a statement issued by the NLC President, Mr Ayuba Wabba, in Abuja.

    Newsmen reports that the call comes as the NBC notified the management of 52 electronic media organisations in the country of its decision to withdraw their licences for their inability to pay their licence renewal.

    Newsmen reports that NBC had also on Aug. 20, extended the period which all affected media houses should pay their outstanding debts before Aug. 23.

    Wabba however, described the action by the NBC  as a “slippery road to press emasculation’’.

    “The most palpable reason for the failure of many of the media houses to pay for the renewal of their operating licenses could be easily found in the deteriorating economic conditions in Nigeria.

    “This is understandable given the severe stress and strain that businesses in Nigeria have been subjected to owing to fallout of the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020.

    “The ongoing disruption in global and domestic energy supply, the foreign exchange volatilities, and the associated hyper-inflation, ’’he said.

    He said that many media houses just like most businesses in Nigeria suffered the double jeopardy of escalating business costs and plummeting revenues.

    “To compound, the situation is the epileptic supply of electricity with the national grid collapsing intermittently for the umpteenth time in recent months,’’ he said.

    He also said this was in addition to the soaring and scary rising energy costs which hit electronic media houses hardest given that they must always be on air whether it makes economic sense or not.

    “There are salaries to pay, maintenance services, and sundry basic operating costs to keep the media houses running and serving their listening and viewing public.

    “Amidst these operational suffocations, how does the NBC expect the media houses to generate the money to renew their operating licenses?

    “Indeed, Nigeria’s media houses should be eulogized for resilience, and tenacity in the face of prevailing economic blizzards, ’’he said.

    Wabba noted that the action of the NBC also smacks of insensitivity to the welfare of the staff of the media houses which operations were been shut down.

    He said it was unthinkable that in the middle of “very traumatic economic realities’’, government would be thinking of flinging many Nigerians into the unemployment market.

    He noted that this was not new, as recently the Nigeria Governors Forum had made a case for the mass sack of Nigerians in government employment.

    “The unsolicited advice which had been robustly deflated by the NLC reveals a very embarrassing underbelly in the thinking of those commanding the reins of power in Nigeria today- crass insensitivity.

    “ This is very sad and unfortunate,’ ’Wabba said.

    He said that in defence of the media, democratic and economic rights of Nigerians, the Congress called on the NBC to rescind its decision to withdraw the operating licenses of the affected 52 media houses.

  • NLC, ASUU condemn FG’s “no-work, no pay” rule on university lecturers

    NLC, ASUU condemn FG’s “no-work, no pay” rule on university lecturers

    Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has joined the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, to condemn the Federal Government’s “no-work, no pay” rule on university lecturers following the union’s six-month-old strike.

     

    According to them, the university lecturers were not the architects of ASUU’s strike.

     

    Therefore, NLC backed ASUU on its insistence on the payment of the withheld salaries of its members as a condition to end a six-month-old strike.

     

    ASUU pointed out that it was unfair for the Federal Government to invoke a no-work, no pay rule on university teachers, who were not the architects of the lingering strike.

     

    Urging the government to “tone down its rhetorics and be more accommodating”, the NLC warned that its threat to embark on a nationwide strike over the lockdown of the universities had not been ruled out.

     

    Head of Information of the NLC, Benson Upah, disclosed the union’s position as students suggested Public-Private Partnership (PPP) as a way of ending the crises in the university system.

     

    The Minister of State for Education, Goodluck Opiah advised Nigerians not to allow reports on the ASUU strike to rubbish the gains of the over N3 trillion investment by the Muhammadu Buhari administration in the education sector.

     

    Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, had said last week that the insistence of ASUU on the payment of the withheld salaries was stalling negotiations by the parties.

     

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the ASUU strike started on February 14, 2022.

     

    In 2017, the union went on strike for 30 days; in 2018, the lecturers shunned work for 90 days while in 2020, the public universities were shut down for 270 days.

     

    Recall that earlier, ASUU raised alarm over the resignation of lecturers from the nation’s universities for greener pastures abroad.

     

    The union attributed the development to the Federal Government’s poor treatment of its members which it said had forced many to venture into other sources of livelihood.

  • Obi/Datti will double Buhari’s 2019 votes in 2023 – Dr Yunusa Tanko

    Obi/Datti will double Buhari’s 2019 votes in 2023 – Dr Yunusa Tanko

    …says they enjoy wide acceptance in northern Nig

    …insists we’ve maintained the cleanest campaign so far

    Chairman of National Conscience Party, NCP and spokesperson of Third Force, Dr Yunusa Tanko has said the Obi/Datti ticket of the Labour Party have what it takes to double the 15million votes garnered by President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019 to change the Nigerian political narrative.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dr Tanko made this disclosure in a webinar organized by the Nigerian-American Coalition for Justice and Democracy… Obi/Datti Presidency Project, late Sunday night with vivid analysis pointing to the preparedness of Labour Party to unseat the ruling APC.

    Tanko in his presentation stated that from Labour Party’s projections, Buhari’s 2019 will be doubled with little or no stress as the Obi/Datti support base is in the youths.

    Tanko explained that his presentation is in three perspectives bordering on how we started, where we are and our focus.

    He said for the past 15 months the labour movement started but had been in the struggle for over three decades right from the days of Dan Nwanyanwu down to the present chairman, Comrade Julius Abure and our Hon Secretary, Umar Farouk.

    “This is the first time that the labour movement is well coordinated towards a common purpose and common interest and this should be well encouraged to get the desired results.

    “The TUC, NLC and trade unions across Nigeria are well enmeshed into this movement and there’s urgent need for proper cohesion.

    “By May 2022 Peter Obi joined the movement primarily to give back government to the youths and galvanise Nigeria into a productive nation and not a consumer nation.

    ” I just arrived from a sensitisation tour of the North West with our Hon Secretary where we discovered the massive support for the Obi/Datti ticket as this was an opener considering our findings in the seat of the caliphate, Sokoto, Zamfara, Katsina, Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano and Kebbi.

    “Our findings were astonishing as we discovered that the support cuts across the core northern states of Nigeria.

    He explained that “when we got to Sokoto the only standing billboard was that of Obi/Datti When we got to sokoto one the major billboard is Peter/ Datti standing while some are destroyed signifying acceptance of the Obi/datti candidacy.

    “By the time we finished the sensitisation program in Sokoto, a physically challenged lady, by name Aisha wept uncontrollably that she’s going to support the Obi/Datti ticket with her vote.

    “Just imagine what the outlook will be if all the physically challenged persons in the zone mobilise themselves to support us.

    “The man galvanising the Sokoto axis is Comrade Ikenna Ikeagwu, a Pharmacist who resides in Sokoto, he really deserves commendation for all his efforts.

    Tanko further buttressed that “on a daily basis people register on our website and the numbers are in multitudes across Nigeria and in the diaspora.

    “We have more than 150 support groups across Nigeria and they’re broken down into different groups across various endeavours.

    ” We have the intellectual, financial, volunteer, central groups working day and night to ensure victory is attainable next year.

    On 2023 projections:

    “The 2023 elections is close by and we have the youths behind us and the figures are looking up towards as the recently released figures of newly registered voters in 2022 are 12million with youths having 71percent which represents 8.7m youths between the age of 18 – 34 years.

    “Out of 2022 registration, in Kano had 569,000, Lagos 585,639, Rivers 473,974.

    “These are verifiable figures in the public domain that can be cross checked by anybody.

    “The catch here is that we can’t match the money bags money for money, intimidation for intimidation but we can match them with a procedure that I can’t disclose here for security reasons.

    “There’s an urgent need to arrange the various volunteer groups into a central body for proper coordination to achieve greater results.

    “The NLC, TUC, the various critical stakeholders, now is the time to collapse all into a central group because we all have a home now.

    “So far so good we have the cleanest campaign approach strategy and this we must maintain and by God’s grace victory will be ours in 2023.

    Other participants at the webinar and speakers include Professor Eddie Oparaji, a former NADECO chieftain and convener of Nigerian-American Coalition for Justice and Democracy… Obi/Datti Presidency, Moderators: Chijike Ndukwu and Dr Jude Iheoma.

  • Akin Mabogunje: An African institution – By Owei Lakemfa

    Akin Mabogunje: An African institution – By Owei Lakemfa

    PROFESSOR Akinlawon ‘Akin’  Ladipo Mabogunje was an African institution established for all-round development. He is also widely accepted as the Father of African Geography. By 2000, the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, was fed up with the National Housing Fund, NHF, which in the eleven years of its establishment had failed to deliver on mass housing for workers. Under the scheme, all those earning the National Minimum Wage and above, contributed 2.5 per cent of their monthly income.

    Although workers had contributed about N6 billion to the fund, the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, FMBN, which administered the fund had disbursed only a paltry N280 million, while the FMBN and its Siamese twin, the Federal Mortgage Finance Limited, FMFL, had become fat bureaucracies by dipping hands into the fund.  Even with this, they were heavily indebted, including owing outstanding pension to their retired workers, totalling N5.5 billion

    The NLC instructed workers to stop paying to the fund. Many state governments also joined in stopping the deductions to a fund that was not even audited. Rather than fight back using its federal might to enforce the NHF law, the Obasanjo administration on  March 6, 2002 established the Presidential Technical Committee on Housing and Urban Development chaired by Professor Mabogunje. The Committee asked the NLC for a meeting to explain why the NHF had not delivered and what was being done to reverse the trend.

    I was part of the NLC Negotiation Team. Mabogunje had picked Mr. Tanimu Yakubu as the new Managing Director of the FMBN. Some of us in the labour delegation were familiar with Tanimu because together, we had been student union leaders and knew he was passionate about workers. When we got back to review the meeting and plan for subsequent ones with the Committee, I told the delegation that we needed technical support as this was an unusual government team.

    I explained who Mabogunje was, including his being part of a group of intellectuals who in the First Republic had evolved an ideology called ‘Democratic Socialism’ which was adopted by the main opposition party, the Action Group. There was Mr. S.P.O Fortune-Ebie who as head of the Federal Housing Authority, FHA,  had built the sprawling FESTAC Town in Lagos, and  Ms Kare Yekwe, a brilliant lawyer I had known over the years.

    The Mabogunje Committee was open and showed so much sincerity that even when it had to lay off some workers in order to bring in professionals through public advertisement and transparent interviews, the NLC could not raise objections.

    Mabogunje was a major professional in the building of the new capital of Abuja. He came away with  a number of lessons that still defines Nigeria. He had led a team of scientists to the site to determine the ecological conditions of the proposed capital, how many people were to be displaced, the range of assets and compensation to be paid for them. First, a professional in his team, Mr. Bawa Bwari had to be dropped, not because he was incompetent but because the Emir of Abuja did not find him acceptable.

    Bwari’s ‘crime’ was that he had served as the Secretary of the  Gwari Students Association, an organisation that was insisting on the rights of the indigenous Gwari people not to be ruled by traditional rulers from outside.

    When Mabogunje needed a manager for the field station, the Emir brought a man who had not even passed basic school certificate and had zero experience. When he enquired why he could not hire a professional and experienced Gwari indigene, he was told this was not politically acceptable. Mabogunje wrote: “This was historical and derived from the colonial administration’s  obsession with the indirect rule system creating or imposing a traditional ruler even in areas where such did not exist before.”

    Then, Mabogunje and his team needed accommodation and the Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Development Authority, FCDA,  decided to import porta cabins for the purpose from the United States. By the time they arrived, the work was over and the scientists were packing to leave. When it came to building the new capital city, Mabogunje argued that it should be handled by distinguished  Nigerian town planners and architects who would go through competitive bidding assessed by an international panel. But the government rejected this and rather advertised abroad for planners to design the new capital. Subsequently, an American group, International Planning Associates, IPA, was awarded the contract.

    The Mabogunje team had to provide the firm all data collected. Despite this, Nigerian professionals had to join the IPA in reworking its basic design to provide a final and acceptable design. Mabogunje said of this sad tale: “ …If we had arranged to critique the design of a group of Nigerian planners as vigorously as we did that of the foreign firm, we could have had as good, if not better, a product  for our money.” In analysing why there is an obsession for foreign contractors, he said:  “It is difficult to dismiss the insinuations that this is because it is easier to secure foreign exchange through graft when contracts or professional consultancies are handed over to foreign organisations.”

    One more experience of Mabogunje on Abuja. For a man who was so involved in building the city, all his applications for a plot of land were unsuccessful as plots of land were allocated by officials “mainly to friends”. He said one day, as the Chairman of the National Board of Community Banks, he visited then FCT Minister, General Gado Nasko, to request for land to build its national headquarters. During the discussions, he let it known that despite his choosing the exact site Abuja city was built, and participating actively in its construction, he did not have even a square foot of land in the territory. He said when the Minister confirmed this, he was allocated a plot  in Asokoro. But it took him eight years to secure a certificate of occupancy for the land; the result of a skewed civil service.

    Mabogunje traced Nigeria’s problems to the deliberate ploy by British colonialists to “frustrate all serious developmental efforts” and lay faulty political foundations that led to a civil war and three decades of military rule. He agreed that the country, given its diversities, needs an inclusive  system: “But to use  the idea to catapult relatively unqualified  and inexperienced individuals to strategic management  positions  simply   because they come  from a particular  part of the country, is to court  a situation  where every major  institution  of our national life  has failed to live  up to expectation.”

    The global, intensely intellectual and professionally-minded Professor Akin Mabogunje held to his positions until Thursday, August 4, 2022 when at 90, he left, leaving us his very rich legacies.

  • ASUU seeks bill to regulate foreign education for public officers’ children

    ASUU seeks bill to regulate foreign education for public officers’ children

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) have called for a bill to regulate how children of public officers enrol in schools outside the shores of Nigeria.

    Prof. Kingdom Tombra, Chairman of the University of Niger Delta University Wilberforce Island chapter of the union, made this known at the solidarity protest organised by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Tuesday in Yenagoa.

    Newsmen reports that the NLC embarked on the nationwide protest in solidarity with the ASUU and other affiliate unions over the lingering industrial action in public universities in Nigeria.

    “If this is done, it will build a better society by developing formidable educational institutions and improve funding of the university system in Nigeria.

    “This struggle is not against government, but about the working class and against the ruling class and we are very committed to it

    “If the rich and poor go to the same university or institution, I don’t think the strike will occur again.

    “If they school here and their children are here they will show total support for the university system and the tertiary institutions in Nigeria,” he said.

    NAN reports that lecturers in government-owned universities commenced a nationwide strike on Feb. 14 over the adoption of the University Transparency and Accountability  Solution (UTAS) as a payment system in the university sector.

    Earlier, Gov. Douye Diri of Bayelsa who spoke to the organised labour, commended the ASUU and the NLC for the peaceful conduct of the protest, promising to channel their demands to the appropriate quarters.

    Also speaking, Mr John Ndiomu, the NLC Chairman in Bayelsa commended the governor for his peaceful disposition.

    He said that the workers and the students are being represented in the Nationwide solidarity rally.

    Ndiomu, urged the federal government to sign the renegotiated draft agreement between ASUU and the Federal Government.

    ”Adopt University Transparency Accountability Solution (UTAS) in place IPPIS, Pay Earned Academic Allowances (EAA)

    “Release of Revitalization Fund, Release white paper on visitation to Federal Universities. Amend NUC law to control proliferation of state universities without funding,” the labour leader said.

  • ASUU strike: After NLC warning protest, what is next will be worse than ENDSARS protest – Femi Falana

    ASUU strike: After NLC warning protest, what is next will be worse than ENDSARS protest – Femi Falana

    Human rights lawyer and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Femi Falana has advised the federal government of Nigeria to nip in the bud the ongoing nationwide warning protest embarked on by the Nigeria Labour Congress protest (NLC).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Falana on Tuesday in Lagos State gave the advice, disclosing that by the time Nigerians come out fully for the NLC protest, ENDSARS protest will be a mere child’s play.

    The human rights activist, who himself joined the Tuesday’s protest of the NLC at the State House in Lagos, stressed that this is more so because Nigerians are frustrated, disenchanted and embarrassed as a people. Falana argued that the federal government cannot be voting trillions on fuel subsidies and then say there is no money to fund education.

    “For this wonderful outing and as our comrades have said, this is a warning protest. By the time Nigerians come out fully, as our comrades have said, ENDSARS protest will be a mere child’s play because we are tired, we are frustrated, we are disenchanted, we are embarrassed as a people, and I join our comrades in saying that enough is enough.

    “Please, don’t let them deceive you by saying there is no money in our country. It is a lie. Note this, this year’s budget, the regime claimed N443 billion on the so-called fuel subsidy. Later, the regime went to the National Assembly and claimed that it is going to be N4 trillion.

    “The latest now is that the regime is saying that it is going to be N6.5 trillion. Yet, there is no money for education but there is money to pay smugglers, who they claim are smuggling fuel out of Nigeria,” Falana said.

    While stressing that the living standards of Nigerians have gotten, the human rights activist made a reference to President Muhammadu Buhari’s recent statement that he is tired and eager to leave office.

    “The living standards of our people are getting worse by the day. We didn’t vote for a regime to cause hardship in Nigeria and that is what is going on.

    “As we are gathered here today, terrorism has taken over our country. Hardship has taken over our country. Depression has taken over our country. Recession has taken over our country, but President Buhari is junketing all over the world.

    “He has already told Nigerians that he’s tired and that he is anxious to go home. We are, therefore, saying today that Buhari must go,” Falana said.

    TNG reports that the NLC is embarking on a two-day protest nationwide in solidarity with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). ASUU strike has entered its fifth month since the union downed tools on February 14, 2022.

  • ASUU: We will not stop talking until FG fulfils 2009 agreement – NLC

    ASUU: We will not stop talking until FG fulfils 2009 agreement – NLC

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Ebonyi chapter says it will not stop talking until the federal and state government fulfilled the 2009 promises for the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    Recall that ASUU had been on industrial action for over five months over the Federal Government’s failure to fulfil its 2009 agreement with the union, forcing the NLC to embark on a nationwide solidarity protest.

    The protesters, who carried different inscriptions, matched from popular the Pastoral Centre, Abakaliki to Pa Ngele Oruta township stadium.

    Mr Ikechukwu Nwafor, NLC Chairman in Ebonyi said the congress joined the nationwide protest in solidarity with ASUU strike, urging the federal and state government to expedite action to bring their children back to school.

    Addressing affiliates in Abakaliki, Nwafor said the protest was to call the attention of the government to meet the demands of ASUU and address the poor management of the education sector in the country.

    He said the congress would also support a three-day warning strike immediately after the protest in solidarity with union.

    The NLC chairman called for the need to meet with demands of the striking ASUU workers to end the industrial action.

    “The demand of the ASUU should be met. Let the wellbeing of workers in universities be met. Let the workers right be respected and let our children go back to school.

    “This struggle is in the interest of our children. We join states all over the federation and Abuja to protest on behalf of ASUU and our children who have been at home for over five months.

    “Enough is enough over the incessant strikes in the universities,” he said.

    Dr Ikechukwu Igwenyi, ASUU Chairman, Ebonyi University branch expressed gratitude to the NLC body and noted that they would not go back until their demands were met.

    “We want adequate funding of the universities by the government. We need our salaries paid. We will not go back to class unless our demands are met.’’

    Mr Ogugua Egwu, the Chairman, ASUU branch of the Alex Ekwueme Federal University said they were also ready to continue with the strike if the government refused to meet with their demands.

    “We need improve facilities in the universities; we are saying no to salaries disparities. The Federal Government should sign and implement the 2009 agreement with our union,” Egwu said.

    Mrs Patience Uzoma, a parent tasked the Federal Government on improved facilities and salaries of the workers in the universities.

    “If Nigeria must develop, attention must be paid to primary and secondary schools, especially to our university education,” Uzoma advised.