Tag: NLC

  • Don’t remove Labour from Exclusive List – NLC

    Don’t remove Labour from Exclusive List – NLC

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) says it will strongly advocate against removing Labour from the Exclusive Legislative List.

    NLC President Ayuba Wabba said this in a statement entitled “Labour on the Legislative Exclusive List”, on Tuesday in Abuja.

    He noted that labour issues were presently domiciled in the Second Schedule, Legislative Powers, Part 1, Exclusive list, Item 34.

    According to him, labour, including trade unions, industrial relations; conditions, safety and welfare of labour; industrial disputes; prescribing a national minimum wage for the federation or any part thereof; and industrial arbitration.

    ”For the sake of our national interest, security and industrial harmony, labour should not be one of the items that should be devolved to the states,” he said.

    Wabba while explaining how it came to be on the Exclusive list, noted that the nation states legislations on Labour drives substantially from the International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions, protocols and recommendations and other instruments domesticated through the Acts of parliament.

    He added that this explained the near uniformity of labour laws across the nations of the world and relative global industrial order, harmony and an attraction for foreign investment.

    He said this was in realisation of the reality that 17 days after independence in 1960 under a democratic government Nigeria fell in line by rectifying and domesticated ILO Conventions 87 and 98, guarantying the right to organise and collectively bargain.

    He however said that Nigeria had since adopted all the core conventions in its capacity as a sovereign nation and regularly attends ILO organ meetings as a sovereign in line with international best practices.

    The NLC president further said the reasons for Nigeria’s relative industrial growth and development, and evolution into an investor’s haven were partly attributed to its willingness to subject itself to this global order and corpus of international labour standards.

    He noted that the ILO was created in 1919 by the Versailles Peace Treaty ending World War 1 along with the League of Nations to address widespread demands for social justice and improved living standards for the world’s working people.

    He said that this had survived World War 2 and today served as a specialised agency of the UN dedicated to promoting labour standards globally.

    ”In the light of this, deregulating labour to the states will inevitably create intractable problems. At membership level, the 36 states of the federation and FCT are no sovereign which is a basis for ILO membership of Nigeria.

    ”Secondly, a corpus of labour legislation across the 36 states and FCT will almost certainly create a judicial nightmare.

    ”Thirdly, investors will be scared away as they will consider this as unnecessary addition to the already hostile operating environment. At the level of workers who often act in the national interest, this will whittle down patriotic influence.

    ”In the light of this, we will strongly advocate against removing labour from the Exclusive Legislative List. Not even during the military era was this contemplated,” he said.

  • AFRAID  DON CATCH PRESIDENT BUHARI – By Mideno Bayagbon

    AFRAID DON CATCH PRESIDENT BUHARI – By Mideno Bayagbon

     

    The news, when it broke last week, was hardly surprising. Call the President any name you like. This was one time it pays to be a coward even when it comes packaged with monumental consequences for the economy and the country. A lot of tension was easily doused; the day of Armageddon postponed. It was to be the day of seemingly self inflicted trouble for the Buhari government. Yet all agree that this now postponed policy is inevitable, that the government cannot continue to shoulder the huge subsidy.

    Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, which had long been flexing its muscles in preparation for the proposed nationwide strikes by workers on 27th January and 2 February was the first to react and drink the chill pill. It suspended the series of strike actions it had marshalled to counter the intention of the federal government to finally remove the contentious subsidy on petrol this year.

    Senate President, Ahmed Ibrahim Lawan, had earlier become a self appointed spokesman for the Buhari government in its attempt at dousing the impending fire. He donned a damage limiting toga and came to the public to say that President Muhammadu Buhari has never told anyone that he will remove the subsidy on fuel sometime in April this year. He of course was lying through his teeth. His puerile attempt did nothing to ameliorate the seething anger threatening to boil over in a few days.

    It is auspicious however, that the Buhari government, seeing what is happening around its neighbouring countries, where street protests have led to opportunistic coups in Mali, Sudan, Guinea and just recently, Burkina Faso, had to bite the bullet. There was urgent need not to allow some military adventurists and anti-democratic forces to capitalise on the discontent of the people, which was geared to boil over with removal of subsidy on petrol. In the neighbouring West African countries which have recently tumbled over into military rules, similar social, economic and security situations like ours, including jihadist terrorism, have been the catalysts.It therefore makes sense to shelve the proposed removal.

    The government which did not make any room for subsidy in its 2022 budget had to hurriedly came out when it had become inevitable that the economy would be grounded to a halt, with dire consequences on its trail. Even without any perceived coup threat, it could be calamitous if the series of strikes to be embarked upon by the NLC, were allowed to go on. Finance minister, Zainab Ahmed, who broke the news of the suspension of the removal of subsidy on petrol, informed that the Buhari, government has realised that the timing of its planned removal of petrol subsidy is “problematic” and will worsen the suffering of Nigerians.

    She also informed that the 2022 budget passed by the National Assembly will now be reworked to accommodate subsidy which is projected to be around N3 trillion. Don’t forget the 2022 national budget for the country is only N10 trillion. For a country already saddled with servicing its humongous debts profile with over 48.5 percent of its expected revenue intake, the Minister did not say where the fund for the subsidy will be prised from. But Special Adviser to the President, Femi Adesina had the answer: Nigeria has no option than to go borrowing again.

    Once again the Nigerian Labour Congress wins. Fuel importers and racketeers win. The economy loses. The Buhari government loses face as it faced its fear, damned all consequences and did the right thing by the country.

    The fuel subsidy albatross has been the Achilles heels of succeeding governments in Nigeria. Even the lion hearted President Olusegun Obasanjo had to also bite the chill bullet. Yet there is no economist worthy of the name who is in agreement that Nigeria should continue to fritter away its very lean resources on subsidising a critical item like petrol. But because we have failed to refine our fuel locally, despite the huge acreage of crude deposits; and because we have failed to properly turn around the four comatose refineries, or build new ones, fuel subsidy has become the nation’s invitation to economic and political implosion.

  • Fuel subsidy: Protests unnecessary again – NLC

    Fuel subsidy: Protests unnecessary again – NLC

    The Chairman, Nasarawa State Chapter of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr Yusuf Iya, has directed the union members to suspend a proposed strike against the plan to remove fuel subsidy.

    He said in Lafia on Wednesday that the suspension followed a directive by its national headquarters to that effect.

    The NLC had planned a protest for Thursday but viewed it unnecessary since the federal government had addressed the issue.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the organised labour had earlier directed all state chapters to mobilise members for a mass protest should the federal government go ahead to remove fuel subsidy.

    Iya explained that already the union in the state had mobilised members, civil societies, traders and organisations, among others, in readiness for mass protest.

    The NLC chairman commended the civil societies and other allies for their support so far.

    He assured workers that the leadership of the union would continue to stand for them by prioritising their welfare.

    Iya explained that the union had only suspended the planned action, it could revisit it if necessary.

    He said that the leadership of the congress would continue to engage the government in dialogue to ensure local refining of petroleum, creation of sustainable jobs and provision of petrol at affordable price.

  • Fuel subsidy removal: Why we shelved planned protest – NLC

    Fuel subsidy removal: Why we shelved planned protest – NLC

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has opened up on why it decided to stop the protest it was planning against the removal of fuel subsidy.

    The NLC on Tuesday shelved its planned nationwide protest over the planned hike in the pump price of petrol by the Federal Government.

    The labour had scheduled a nationwide protest for Jan. 27 and a national protest for Feb. 2 , to oppose government planned hike in pump price of petrol.

    But the federal government on Monday announced that it had also suspended the planned removal of fuel subsidy.

    NLC President, Mr Wabba Ayuba said the decision to suspend the protest was taken at a virtual National Executive Council meeting of the NLC.

    ”At the peak of very rigorous mobilisation of Nigerians by the NLC and a host of her Civil Society allies, the government through the Minister of Finance on Jan. 24, made a public announcement reversing the plans to increase petrol pump price.

    “The position of the government was also officially communicated to the congress with calls for further engagement.

    ”Following the reversal and reapproach by government, the National Executive Council of the Nigeria Labour Congress met this morning virtually to consider the new position of the government.

    ”The NEC after vigorous debates took a decision to suspend the planned nationwide protest scheduled for Jan. 27 and the national protest scheduled for Feb.2,” he said.

    Wabba added: ”The leadership of the congress has communicated this organ’s decision to our civil society allies who have stood stoically behind Nigerian workers in our quest for social and economic justice for workers and the downtrodden people of our country.

    “Going forward, we will continue to engage with the government on the very critical issues of ensuring local refining of petroleum, creation of sustainable jobs and affordable price of petrol for Nigerian workers and people.”

    Meanwhile, the Lagos State Chapter of NLC has said the shelved protest due to hold on Jan. 27, 2022 is for peace to reign and allow the Federal Government to fufil its agreement.

    The State Chairman of NLC, Mrs Funmi Sessi, who made this known on Tuesday in Lagos, urged government to be dutiful and diligent in fulfilling its part of the agreement.

    “The NLC has reviewed every situation surrounding the protest; we have reviewed the intervention of those top leadership of the country; also the intervention of those who are the stakeholders.

    “Government has said it is not going ahead with the increase in the petrol price and we are not expecting the increase at any point in time, whether now or in the future.

    “We expect government to be truthful, dutiful, diligent and work on our refineries,“ Sessi said.

  • ‘Fuel hike will bring hardship on Nigerians’ – NLC urges FG to announce withdrawal

    ‘Fuel hike will bring hardship on Nigerians’ – NLC urges FG to announce withdrawal

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has called on the Federal Government to announce the withdrawal of its plans to increase the pump price of petrol in the country.

    The NLC President, Mr Ayuba Wabba, made this appeal in a letter jointly signed by Mr Emanuel Ugboaja, the General Secretary of the congress, and addressed to state governors on Monday in Abuja.

    The letter is titled:” Petition by Nigerian workers against the proposed increase in the price of the Premium Motor Spirit (PMS)”.

    According to Wabba, labour write to draw the attention to the recent proposal by the federal government to increase the pump price of the Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), also known as petrol anytime from now.

    ”It is the well-considered view of Nigerian workers as conveyed through the leadership of NLC that the proposed hike, if it goes through, would induce and impose an unprecedented degree of hardship on Nigerian workers, their families and the generality of the populace.

    ”The net and multiplier effects of such socio-economic dislocation especially with regards to decent standard of living, productivity and national security are better imagined than experienced.

    ”Nigerian workers understand that government pays out significant amount of money as so-called petrol subsidy.

    ”Nigerian workers also appreciate the fact that the monies spent on the so-called petrol subsidy would be totally unnecessary if government is alive to its responsibilities of proper management of critical national assets especially our local refineries,” he said.

    The NLC president also noted that it was the mismanagement of the four public oil refineries by successive governments that opened the floodgates of mass importation of refined petroleum products.

    He further said that this have consequently unfurled incessant increases in the prices of refined petroleum products in Nigeria.

    He added that, the fact is very clear – there is no way a country can control the price of what it does not produce.

    ”For a critical national security product like petrol and other refined petroleum derivatives, the situation is akin to handing over our national sovereignty to other climes.

    ”There is no better description of neo-colonialism and toxic neo-liberalism than this,” he said.

    The NLC president said Nigerian workers believed that the scourge of incessant hike in the pump price of petrol is self-inflicted and therefore totally unacceptable.

    Wabba therefore said NLC demanded that the federal government should announce the withdrawal of its plans to increase the pump price of petrol.

    He also said the federal government should re-engage organised Labour in Nigeria in discussions in order to find mutually acceptable solutions to the current quagmire in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sub-sector.

    ”The Federal Government should demonstrate seriousness and commitment to overhauling our local refineries as a lasting panacea to mass importation of refined petroleum products.

    ”That is importation Pricing Model, and a host of lost opportunities, official corruption and self-inflicted dislocations occasioned by mass importation of refined petroleum products into Nigeria.

    ”Governments at all levels in Nigeria should take immediate steps to improve governance and public accountability.

    ”This is in order to regain the confidence of Nigerians that the cardinal constitutional mandate of guaranteeing the welfare and security of Nigerians has not been traded off,” he said.

    Wabba added that organised Labour as a responsible social partner is willing and ready to work with government to find enduring solutions to the crisis in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector and other areas of challenge in governance.

    He also noted that the forthcoming nationwide protest for Jan. 27, is geared at alerting government on the sufferings that Nigerians are going through.

    ”It is also geared to show the additional insufferable trauma that Nigerians would be subjected to if the government goes ahead with the hike in the price of refined petroleum products.

    ”We plead that Your Excellency should use your position as a member of the National Economic Council to convey our foregoing persuasions and demands to the Federal Government,” he said.

    He warned that Nigerian workers would have no other choice than to down tools once the government goes ahead to force another round of petrol price increment on Nigerians.

    “Nigerians have suffered enough,” said the labour leader.

  • Senate President begs NLC, TUC to abort nationwide protest

    Senate President begs NLC, TUC to abort nationwide protest

    President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, has urged the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, and the Trade Union Congress, TUC, to “abort” the planned protests against the Federal Government’s proposed removal of fuel subsidy.

    Lawan described the planned nationwide protest as “totally unnecessary”.

    He made the appeal on Monday when he met with the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed; and the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, over the planned removal of subsidy on petroleum products by the Federal Government.

    Lawan faulted the timing for the planned removal of subsidy on petroleum products.

    He stated that in as much as the administration and management of subsidy on petroleum products are flawed, President Muhammadu Buhari-led government believes that sufficient planning must be carried out before its eventual removal.

    He said, “The position of everyone in government today is that admittedly, subsidy administration and management are flawed because of so many reasons.

    “Admittedly, the burden is huge and massive and there is a need at one point to do away with the subsidy.

    “Even though our economy is growing, we still have the challenge of getting things to be better for our people.

    “A lot of us in this administration believe that the issue of removal of subsidy should be handled with utmost care, especially that sufficient planning needs to be done.

    “It is not about NLC, we are talking about every Nigerian. We are concerned beyond the Nigeria Labour Congress.

    “I am taking this opportunity to appeal to the TUC and NLC to shelve this plan to go on strike or demonstration, it is totally unnecessary.

    “There is not going to be a removal of subsidy, so there is no need for this. Please, let’s not create unnecessary tension where there should be none.

    “I appeal to them using this medium, to please forget about this January 27, 2022, deadline because there is no need for any deadline.”

  • NLC cautions against subsidy removal, hike in fuel price

    NLC cautions against subsidy removal, hike in fuel price

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has appealed to the federal government to reconsider the plan to remove oil subsidies for the interest of the workers.

    Mr Ikechukwu Nwafor, NLC chairman in Ebonyi, gave the advice in an interview on Friday in Abakaliki.

    Recall that the National Economic Council (NEC) had recommended an increase in the pump price of fuel to N302 per litre.

    Petrol price currently sells between N162 and N165 per litre in the country.

    Nwafor, who decried the current economic situation in the country, noted that reconsidering the plans would bring more peace than worries to citizens.

    “It is high time we fix our own refineries. We can end the importation of fuel in this country if we can have the refineries working.

    “We should understand that this is not the right time to increase the pump price when the cost of living is already difficult. Prices of food commodities are already beyond the capacity of civil servants.

    “How will the civil servants, who are the engine of the economy, cope?

    “What we are telling the federal government is to consider the consequences of the increase on the masses and the current economy.

    “The increase is going to affect every facet of life, including transportation, high cost of food items, clothing, housing, among others,” he said.

    On NLC plans to protest on Jan. 27, he said that its members are ready and prepared for the protest.

    “We have mobilised and we have had a series of meetings and we will continue to meet for proper planning. I must tell you, plans for the protest are in top gear.

    “We call on Nigerians and Ebonyi state to rise against the removal of oil subsidy and hike on fuel price.

    “Of course, the increase is going to affect all citizens and we are saying no to it,” the chairman stated.

    Meanwhile, the 36 state governors have resolved to engage NLC and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) over the proposed N302 new fuel pump price.

  • ASUU is a trade union, says NLC

    ASUU is a trade union, says NLC

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has said that the Academic Staff Union of Universitiess (ASUU) is a trade union.

    The organised is apparently reacting to recent comments made by the Head of Civil Service of the Federation (HOCSF), Dr Folasade Yemi-Esan, that ASUU is not a trade union.

    The NLC President, Mr Ayuba Wabba, clarifed this in a statement on Thursday in Abuja.

    Wabba noted that Yemi-Esan made the comment during the opening of the 2020/2021 Joint National Public Service Negotiating Council meeting that was widely reported by the news media.

    He maintained that ASUU is a trade union organisation in line with global best practice.

    “We find this claim as a misrepresentation of facts.

    ”For the purpose of setting the records straight, the Nigeria Labour Congress wishes to disclaim the misleading statement by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation on the status of ASUU as an organisation.

    ”The Academic Staff Union of Universities formed in 1978 was a successor body to the Nigerian Association of University Teachers formed in 1965.

    ”Since its formation, ASUU is a trade union affiliated to the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

    ”The founding President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Comrade Hassan Sunmonu currently serves as one of the National Trustees of ASUU,” he said.

    The NLC president noted that the history of ASUU as a trade union has been that of struggles.

    He added that the shining badge in the antecedents of ASUU is the commitment of the union to fight for the interests of its members and those of the ordinary Nigerian.

    He also said that the persistent demand and activism by ASUU for wage and social justice has seen the union and its members come under very heavy shellacking by successive governments in Nigeria.

    ”It is truly sad that such a pan-Nigerian and progressive union composed of some of the very best intellectuals in Nigeria could be easily dismissed as not being a trade union by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation.

    ”Whatever Dr Yemi-Esan wants to achieve with such a fallacious claim is difficult to discern.

    ”We implore the Academic Staff Union of Universities, which has been the intellectual backbone of Organised Labour and workers in Nigeria, to ignore the disparaging claims by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation.

    ”Dr Folasade Yemi-Esan is not well informed of the claims she made as she is not a competent authority to assert on trade union registration and indeed ancillary trade union concerns in Nigeria,” he said.

    He further urged Nigerian workers and other well-meaning members of the public to ignore the comments.

  • Fuel Hike:  Delta NLC brace up for nation-wide rally

    Fuel Hike: Delta NLC brace up for nation-wide rally

    The Delta State Executive Council (SEC) of the NLC, says it will mobilise its affiliates on Jan. 27 to protest the Federal Government proposed hike in petrol pump price in the country.
    Arising from its maiden meeting of the year on Wednesday in Asaba, the labour union said that the meeting was convened to deliberate on the Federal Government’s move to increase the pump price of petrol from the current N165 per liter.
    In a communiqué signed by its Chairman, Goodluck Ofobruku, and the Secretary, Innocent Ofuonyeadi, the union said that the decision to embark on the peaceful rally is in compliance with the directives of the National Headquarters of the NLC.
    The three-point Communiqué which was read by Ofuoneadi, stated that the Delta State Council of the NLC shall mobilise all its affiliates to participate fully in the nation-wide protest on Jan. 27, 2022, directing the leadership of affiliate unions and civil society partners to ensure that their members take part in the rally in Asaba.
    “The law enforcement agencies are to cooperate with Labour towards ensuring that the protest is peaceful,” the communique stated.
  • NLC threatens FG: We’ll shut down Nigeria if…

    NLC threatens FG: We’ll shut down Nigeria if…

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) is not about to back down on its objection to the plan by the federal government to hike petrol price and electricity tariff.

    Labour vowed yesterday to shut down the country should government proceed with the planned price hike in the new year.

    Nigerians, it said in its new year message, have had enough of what it labeled anti-people policies and would not tolerate such any longer.

    In the message signed by NLC President Ayuba Wabba, congress declared that Nigerians “have suffered enough and will not endure more punishment by way of further petrol and electricity price increases.”

    It hinged its opposition to the planned fuel price hike on four points including “deceit and duplicity associated with the politics of ‘petrol price increase’ by successive Nigerian governments” and government’s inability to make the nation’s refineries function.

    It said: “The truth is that the perennial increase by government of the pump price of petrol is actually a transfer of government failure and inability to effectively govern to the poor masses of our country.

    “We are talking of the failure of government to manage Nigeria’s four oil refineries and inability to build new ones more than thirty years after the last petrochemical refinery in Port Harcourt was commissioned; the failure to rein in smuggling and the failure to determine empirically the quantity of petrol consumed in Nigeria.

    “The shame takes a gory dimension with the fact that Nigeria is the only OPEC country that cannot refine her own crude oil.

    “During the negotiations that trailed the last increase in petroleum prices, Organised Labour made a cardinal demand on government which is that it must take immediate steps to revamp and rehabilitate Nigeria’s refineries.

    “A Technical Committee was set up to monitor progress in this regard. As we all know, the work of the Technical Committee like our abandoned public refineries has ground to a halt and further negotiations with government adjourned sine die for nearly one year now.

    “As a responsible social partner, we have at different times called on government to show us what they are doing in response to our demands but silence is the response we get.

    “All we hear from government are half-hearted media pronouncements on efforts to allocate funds for the rehabilitation of our public refineries. On ground, there is no commensurate action.

    “Between 2012 and now, about $9.5 billion has been spent on Turn Around Maintenance (TAM), Greenfield Refinery Projects and even public investments in private refineries.

    “The tragedy is that despite these humungous investments of public funds, government continues to present the crisis of mass importation of refined petroleum products into Nigeria and the consequent import-based pricing regime of refined petroleum products as a fait accompli.

    “This neo-colonial narrative in Nigeria petroleum sub-sector is what the Nigerian working-class family has rejected as unfathomable and unacceptable as it is antithetical to the notions of sovereignty and self-actualization and a mockery of the sacrifice of our heroes past.

    “Even in the classic example of capitalism, there is something called the theory of comparative advantage where a country deploys its strategic assets to secure the highest possible positive outcomes for its citizens.

    “Unfortunately, successive governments in Nigeria have failed to take strategic advantage of our natural endowment in oil and gas, especially our prime position as the highest producer of crude oil in Africa, to expand our economy, induce economic growth and engender sustainable national development.

    “Today, instead of referring to crude oil as the blessing that it is, we now commonly describe this gift of God to Nigeria as “Resource Curse”.

    “The quagmire of the Dutch Disease or Resource Curse in our country is most exemplified in our downstream petroleum sub-sector.

    “The despair of our unfortunate Catch 22 situation is that government increases the pump price of petroleum products when the price of crude oil increases and falls in the international commodities market. The explanation is that such increases automatically translate to increases in the price of refined petroleum products.

    “When the price of crude oil falls, the excuse is that the enormous pressure on the value of the Nigerian naira occasioned by drop in forex revenue exacerbates the crisis of naira devaluation and causes hike in petrol price.

    “Even to the blind, the solution is clear – Nigeria must regain her capacity to locally refine petroleum products. There is no escaping the fact that our public refineries must be made to work.

    “There is no short cut to the reality that we must replace the exploitative and subservient policy of Import-Based Price Regime with Local Production Based Price Regime for refined petroleum products.

    “There is no explaining away through disingenuous Power Point presentations, procured rallies and over-rehashed publicity in the media the simple fact that as a major Oil Producing country in the world and after nearly seventy years of oil exploration in Nigeria, our country cannot deliver on efficient and effective public petroleum refineries.

    “Nothing dents the image of Nigeria and presents us as a country incapable of providing governance as the failed narratives in our downstream petroleum sub-sector.

    “Second, we are concerned about the missed opportunities and hemorrhage of potential revenue to public coffers that government’s continued apathy to reconstructing the current negative narrative in our downstream petroleum sub-sector.

    “The advantages and multiplier effect of local refining of petroleum products in Nigeria are enormous. There is the angle of mass job creation, increase in revenue accruable to government, promotion of environmental integrity in oil bearing communities as the scourge of artisanal refining with its deleterious impact on the environment and the consequent unrests and agitation such oil pollution precipitates would take a nose dive.

    “The truth is that with self- sufficiency in oil refining, Nigeria will be able to meet not only demand for local consumption but also will be in a grand position to cater for the refined petroleum needs of the sub-region and the African continent as a whole.

    “Unfortunately, the comparative advantage that government fails to see as strategic business opportunity, private investors such as Dangote Group are taking this advantage and are moving mountains and valleys to syndicate finance from institutional lenders to establish one of the largest petrochemical refineries in the world in Lekki – Lagos State.

    “For us in the labour movement, we do not believe that government is shortsighted to the huge benefits accruable to the commonwealth by the robust development of the downstream petroleum sector especially through investment in the rehabilitation of our four public refineries and building of new refineries.

    “Given the direct relationship between the outrageous amount said to be invested in the payment of the so-called petroleum subsidy and the pressure to get foreign loans from Bretton Wood Institutions to meet perennial shortfall in revenue, we believe that the crisis of the under-development of Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector, the comatose of our four public refineries and the inability of successive government to right this economic sabotage smacks of an international conspiracy at the behest of local collaborators to keep the Nigerian economy and people perpetually on their knees.

    “The suggestion by government that the remedy to this malady is to stop further payment of the so-called petrol subsidy is akin to cutting one’s nose in order to spite one’s face.

    “What the government is proposing is to abandon the Nigerian workers and people to very cruel market forces whose sole drive is profit maximization.

    “This is why we believe that private investment in building petroleum refineries is not enough. Government must ensure that public refineries also work.

    ‘This way, there would be true competition and Nigerians would be able to derive the most benefit from a resource that God freely and amply made available to the Nigerian nation.

    “We have also already described the idea of paying transport allowances as robbing ourselves to pay ourselves as the amount being bandied for such transport subsidy clearly outstrips the amount that is currently expended on the so-called petrol subsidy.

    “Third, as a pan Nigerian organisation, Organised Labour is concerned that the crisis in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector is further aggravated by the persisting tumult in the upstream subsector.

    “It was recently reported that almost 200 million barrels of crude oil were lost in 2021. This was as a result of crude oil theft, ageing infrastructure, poor long term investment outlay, poor security of our inland waterway, and challenges arising from conflicts with oil bearing communities and host communities of oil facilities. This is very unfortunate.

    “Even more disturbing is the fact that just like the failed TAMs, no major culprit has been arrested and successfully prosecuted.

    “Our fourth ground for rejecting any further increase in the pump price of petrol is based on our agreement with government in September 2020 that any further increase in the price of petrol should be shelved until government and labour undertakes a review of the state of local refineries in Nigeria and until government takes commensurate action to revamp our public petroleum refineries.

    “It is in these lights that we consider the current proposals by government at the clear promoting of Bretton Woods Institutions to increase the pump price of petrol as anti-people, insensitive and a disservice to the welfare of Nigerian people which government is constitutionally mandated to protect.

    “At our organ meetings which took place between December 15 and 17, 2021, the Nigeria Labour Congress took a decision to protest the planned hike in the pump price of petrol by government. The protest has been scheduled to take place in all the 36 states of the federation on the 27th of January 2022.

    “The protest in the states would culminate in the submission of protest letters to the 36 State Governors. Subsequently, on the 1st of February 2022, there would be a national protest to be held in the Federal Capital Territory.

    “We urge Nigerian workers and people to dust their sneakers and fully participate in the peaceful protests and rallies aimed at salvaging our economic future.

    “Furthermore, the Nigeria Labour Congress has already barred its mind on the recent signing into law of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “The agitation by different segments of society clearly shows that this very important piece of legislation which Nigerians have kept vigil over for so many years still does not sufficiently address the deficits of governance, oversight, investment, environmental integrity, local beneficiation and the use of petroleum resources to advance the cause of the ordinary Nigerian worker and citizen.

    “We call on the two chambers of the National Assembly to immediately commence the process of reviewing the Petroleum Industry Act to reflect the aspirations of Nigerian workers and people.”