Tag: NLC

  • Private employers paying below N70,000 Minimum wage risk jail – FG

    Private employers paying below N70,000 Minimum wage risk jail – FG

    The Federal Government has issued a stern warning to private-sector employers, stressing that paying below the new N70,000 minimum wage could lead to imprisonment.

    Speaking at the 13th Annual General Meeting of the Employers Association for Private Employment Agencies of Nigeria in Ikeja, Lagos, Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Labour and Employment, Kachollom Daju, represented by John Nyamali, Director of Employment and Wages, said the minimum wage is now a law.

    “The minimum wage is now a law, and as a result, it is a punishable crime for any employer to pay less than N70,000 to any of its workers. Emphasizing the necessity of the updated wage to address current economic conditions, the government asserted that no Nigerian worker, whether in public or private employment, should earn less than this minimum.

    “The private employment agencies should make it compulsory in any contract they take from their principal that their workers should not earn less than the minimum wage. The least paid worker in Nigeria should earn N70,000, and I think that should be after all deductions.

    “The minimum wage is a law, and you can be jailed if you fail to implement it. The Federal Government is committed to ensuring that the least paid worker goes home with N70,000,” she disclosed.

    Responding to the government’s directive, the President of the Employers Association for Private Employment Agencies of Nigeria, Dr Olufemi Ogunlowo, called for clarity on whether the N70,000 minimum wage applies net or gross, urging the government and Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to address any ambiguities in the Act.

    “We are already committed to the minimum wage and providing decent jobs for Nigerians while preventing the exploitation of human resources,” Ogunlowo said.

    Chairperson of the NLC, Lagos State chapter, Funmilayo Sessi, on her part, underscored the impact of economic challenges on workers’ incomes, urging private employers to promptly implement the N70,000 minimum wage.

    “The N70,000 isn’t sufficient in today’s economic realities. Once the consequential adjustment is finalized, all private employment agencies must begin paying their workers the N70,000 minimum wage,” Sessi insisted. “The NLC in Lagos State will ensure strict enforcement, and EAPEAN should avoid any conflict with the NLC regarding the minimum wage.”

     

  • MANI IMARU: Untold Reasons NLC, TUC Endorsed Ighodalo for Edo governorship

    MANI IMARU: Untold Reasons NLC, TUC Endorsed Ighodalo for Edo governorship

    By Mani Imaru.

    Edo State was at the weekend celebrating the popular endorsement given the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP by workers under the aegis of the Nigerian Labour Congress, NLC and the Trade Union Congress, TUC.

    The endorsement of the two labour centers was an unprecedented feat for Ighodalo. It is also a rebuke of the All Progressives Congress, APC candidate, Senator Monday Okpebhelo. The most obvious rebuke for Okpebhelo is the fact that he is being marketed by Senator Adams Oshiomhole who acquired a national reputation as a labour leader.

    However, for the workers who Oshiomhole led at one time to openly snub him and his candidate means that either they found fault with him and his candidate or that they found some positives in Ighodalo. Or perhaps both.

    While not dwelling on the negatives associated with Okpebhelo and his lack of ideas as concerning workers’ welfare, suffice it to say that many workers would have been alarmed by his continuous repetition of the phrase that if elected that he will continue from where Oshiomhole stopped.

    It will not be forgotten that as governor, Oshiomhole embarked on the largest casualization of the work force by any state government. More than 50,000 workers who were employed through the Youth Employment Scheme (YES) in 2009, were sacked in 2015 when Oshiomhole claimed on television that he “picked them” from the “gutters.”

    If Okpebhelo wants to continue the casualisation programme of the Oshiomhole years, one would expect him to say so.

    We also are not forgetful of the fact that Oshiomhole since he joined the APC has helped to break strikes embarked upon by workers against the very things he fought against.

    Meanwhile, the shinning stars of Governor Godwin Obaseki have been echoed by labour leaders. Last Friday they marched out through the streets of Benin to openly declare why they are backing a continuity under Ighodalo.

    Not only has Governor Obaseki been proactive in considering the welfare of workers, Edo State became the first state in the country to implement a minimum wage of N70,000. That was well before the workers even entered into full negotiation with the Federal Government. Please note that federal workers and virtually many other states in the country are yet to start the implementation of the new minimum wage that has been operational in Edo State since May.

    So, when Okpebhelo said at a campaign rally in Auchi on Monday, September 9 that he was going to abolish the salary scheme being implemented by Governor Obaseki for that of the Federal Government, many workers were bound to have been shocked. How could he replace what they enjoy now with what has remained an illusion for federal workers.

    It was as such not surprising that workers decided to reject his message for the positive welfare benefits of the Obaseki administration.

    Indeed, when the workers stormed the Government House, Benin on Friday, the NLC Chairman, Odion Olaye thanked the governor for setting aside N200 million monthly to offset the backlog of gratuity in the State.

     

    He said, “The TUC and NLC are here today to thank you for what you have done for Edo State workers. Prompt payment of salaries and pensions has become your trademark for almost 8 years now.

     

    “Edo workers have endorsed the PDP candidate, Asue Ighodalo as we will all come out en masse on September 21st to vote for the party to ensure continuity in the State. We will vote and defend our votes.”

     

    On his part, the TUC Chairman hailed the governor’s developmental stride in the last eight years, assuring the votes of members of the TUC to thank him for investing in their welfare.

  • Ghost of the witchfinder general – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Ghost of the witchfinder general – By Azu Ishiekwene

    I don’t get involved with what the security services do or how. Their ways are so complex and their motives so unsearchable that sometimes you’ll be forgiven for thinking that working from the answer to the question is the standard operating procedure. Of course, you are told that whatever happens in between is in the public interest.

    As far as fiction imitates life, there is a striking resemblance between the recent hyperactivity in Nigeria’s security services and what happened in a novel set in mid-17th century England.

    Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman (famously called “Double Trouble” by the English press) is a comedy about the birth of the son of Satan and the coming of the End Times.

    The part that reminds me of what is obviously a hectic season for the security services – from the arraignment of the #EndBadGovernance protesters on charges of felony to the police raid on Labour House and run-ins with the NLC president and civil society activists – is the time in England when, according to Pratchett and Gaiman, witch-finding was a respectable profession.

    General Hopkins

    At that time, there was a certain General named Matthew Hopkins. You would think that in pre-industrial England, when poverty, disease and unemployment were rampant, the last thing the state would be interested in would be a witch-hunt. But no. Witch-hunting was good business.

    Hopkins charged each town and village nine pence for every witch he found. But that wasn’t enough. Since he wasn’t paid by the hour, and the reward for not finding any witches was a thank you and a bowl of soup, he invented a way to earn more. He went out of his way to find witches, which made him unpopular in the towns and villages.

    When Hopkins’ madness became insufferable, the villagers framed him as a witch, much to the pleasure of the local authorities, who were also tired of paying him. They hanged him. Hopkins, by many accounts, became the last Witchfinder General in England.

    The world may have substantially passed the time when people were hunted, hanged and burned at the stake on suspicion of witchcraft. But I’m concerned that there is a growing similarity between witchcraft and how Nigeria’s security services look for enemies.

    A British suspect

    Listening to the spokesperson of the Nigeria Police Force, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, explain why the force raided Labour House, the siege on the Labour leadership, and the charge of treason against protesters and their alleged British sponsor, Andrew Martin Wynne, I can almost see the ghost of 17th century England. By his looks – and one must respect his decision to keep his shaggy hair and matted beard – Wynne might have been lumped together with those in the “pointy hat” in those days.

    Not in Nigeria

    But Nigeria is not Hopkins’ England. This is not 1961 when Joseph Tarka was detained for three weeks and charged with treason by the Crown for “inciting” the protests in Tiv land, only to be acquitted later for lack of evidence.

    It is not the Nigeria of 1962 when Chief Obafemi Awolowo was prosecuted for treasonable felony for purportedly working with Ghana to overthrow the government of Nigeria, a scandalous charge borne out of politics rather than law.

    Anthony Enahoro, a journalist’s journalist and scourge of the British government, was also jailed twice for sedition, once for an article mocking a former governor and then for another article “inciting Nigerian troops against the British army.”

    Then, he was deported from England as a “fugitive offender” and jailed a third time along with Awolowo for treasonable felony.

    This is not the Nigeria of military president General Ibrahim Babangida, where human rights activists Gani Fawehinmi, Femi Falana, Beko Ransome-Kuti and Baba Omojola were hounded and imprisoned on the spurious charge of treason by a military government that had lost its way. It is not the Nigeria where Babangida deported sociology lecturer at Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Patrick Wilmot for the “treasonable sin” of teaching what “he was not paid to teach.”

    Or the one where General Sani Abacha hounded NADECO leaders, including President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, for standing up to the extreme human rights abuses of that government.

    In 2024?

    This is 2024, with a government that parades some of the most well-known human rights figures up and down the corridors of power and even among the principal officers of the National Assembly. Where is this ghost of 17th-century England coming from?

    Let me be clear. Protest is not – and should not – be chaos and anarchy. The killing of protesters and police officers during the #EndBadGovernance protests in August, which left seven persons dead, the arson at the NCC building in Kano, the open calls for a military takeover, and the symbolic insinuation that Russian intervention was welcome are inexcusable.

    The silence of some top politicians and leaders, especially from the North, fueled suspicions of complicity if not connivance. Yet, why add a third if two wrongs don’t make a right?

    I don’t know what Intelligence is saying or the briefing President Tinubu is getting. Of course, he needs them. We need them, too, as citizens. No modern state can do without them. But in many countries, their job has become more valuable and sophisticated – and one might even say, often dangerously sophisticated – far beyond the voodoo of Hopkins’ witch-hunt in the east of England.

    Like Aziraphale and Cowley

    For example, for decades in the US, and going back to the Vietnam War, through the Nixon years and the Cold War and even the destabilisation of Libya, the Intelligence services perpetrated some of the vilest acts in pursuit of the so-called enemies of the state, actually a mask for vendetta and a ladder for the ascendancy of the deep state.

    Like the angel Aziraphale and the demon Cowley in Good Omens, the good and bad guys in the security services have shared interests. They routinely collaborate for good and ill, sometimes at the state’s expense.

    Take heed

    Tinubu must take heed. He has a competent Attorney General and Minister of Justice in Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, who should advise him to tread softly. The history of our security services, especially the bad habits inherited from colonial rule and reinforced by the long years of military rule and entitled politicians, hasn’t changed much.

    It’s not the business of police officers, the state security service or special advisers to run the government. That’s not their job. They cannot abridge the people’s freedoms in a quest for ascendancy. Those who breach the law in exercising their liberty should not face the justice that reminds us of Hopkins’ England but a process consistent with modern progressive society, one that Tinubu was voted to uphold.

    As the veteran journalist Owei Lakemfa said in his column last week, the danger is not so much the protesters, their sponsors or the witches in a coven somewhere. The biggest threat to the land is the hardship in plain sight, compounded by the lavish lifestyle of government officials and the lack of clarity about what is next. And the president doesn’t need Witchfinder General Hopkins to tell him.

     

    Azu Ishiekwene is the Editor-in-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the new book, Writing for Media and Monetising It.

  • DSS releases Ajaero’s passport

    DSS releases Ajaero’s passport

    The Department of State Services (DSS) has released the passport of the President of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

    Some of labour leaders, who spoke to Daily Trust on Tuesday in Abuja, said the secret police did not find anything incriminating against Ajaero.

    DSS bowed to pressure from various quarters on Monday when it released the labour leader on bail a few minutes to the ultimatum given by the NLC.

     

     

  • BREAKING: NLC President, Ajaero released from DSS detention

    BREAKING: NLC President, Ajaero released from DSS detention

    The Department of State Services (DSS) has released President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero. The release of Comrade Ajaero was confirmed via the official X (formerly Twitter) account of the labour union.

    “NLC President, Comrade Joe Ajaero [has been] released from DSS detention. The struggle continues; we can’t be silenced,” a post on the official X account of NLC reads.

    It was gathered that Ajaero, who was released by the DSS and allowed him to go home around past 11 pm on Monday, had his passport in order to prevent him travelling out of the country.

    The NLC President said he was grilled for about 15 hours since his arrest around 7 am at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja.

    The labour leader said though he was detained by the DSS, some police officers also came around to grill him at the DSS office in Abuja over the #EndBadGovernance nationwide protests that took place in August.

    Ajaero said he was quizzed over alleged terrorism financing involving a British national, Andrew Wynne.

    The labour leader was on his way to the United Kingdom on Monday for a Trade Union Congress (TUC) event when he was arrested at Abuja airport.

    The NLC had condemned Ajaero’s arrest and gave the secret police Tuesday midnight to release the labour leader. The union had also put all its affiliates, state councils, civil society allies and all patriotic Nigerians on the highest state of alert in the light of “this troubling development.”

    The TUC, global rights group Amnesty International, as well as human rights activist Femi Falana, amongst others, had berated the Federal Government for clamping down on the labour leader and demanded his immediate and unconditional release.

  • BREAKING: NLC gives deadline for release of Joe Ajaero

    BREAKING: NLC gives deadline for release of Joe Ajaero

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has issued a deadline of 12 midnight today for the release of Comrade Joe Ajaero, President of the labour union, who was arrested and detained at the Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport in Abuja.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Comrade Ajaero was arrested en-route to the United Kingdom, where he was scheduled to attend and address the Congress of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) of Britain, representing Nigerian workers in critical discussions on workers’ rights and social justice.

    Following the arrest, the National Administrative Council (NAC) of the NLC quickly convened an emergency meeting. In a communique issued shortly after the meeting, the NAC vehemently condemned the arrest of the NLC President.

    The NLC noted in the communique that Comrade Ajaero was lawfully discharging his duties to represent Nigerian workers and had not committed any offence warranting his arrest and that his detention is an affront to the rights of workers and the democratic principles of freedom of movement and expression.

    “The NLC demands the immediate and unconditional release of Comrade Joe Ajaero before 12 midnight today. The Council reiterates that Joe Ajaero is not a fugitive or a criminal, and his detention is an act of intimidation aimed at silencing dissent and stifling the labor movement’s voice in Nigeria. NAC also demands the immediate reversal of the current hike in the price of petrol to N617/litre,” the communique reads.

    Meanwhile, the NLC has placed all its affiliates, State Councils, Civil society allies, and the Nigerian populace on red alert while stressing that the detention of Comrade Ajaero is an attack not just on the NLC leadership but on the rights of all workers and citizens to organise, protest, and express themselves freely.

    “The NLC will not stand by while these rights are trampled upon. This provocation is another attempt by the State to scuttle the implementation of the new National Minimum Wage.

    “The NLC reaffirms its commitment to defending the rights of Nigerian workers and citizens. The Congress will not relent in its efforts to oppose all forms of oppression. NAC – in – session therefore summons an emergency meeting of the National Executive Council (NEC) by 9:00 AM tomorrow, the 10th day of September, 2024 to take compelling action to engage the current forces of retrogression.

    “The NAC urges the Nigerian Government to reverse this dangerous trend of authoritarianism and lawlessness, which threatens the country’s democratic fabric. NAC-in-session demands the immediate implementation of the New National Minimum Wage which has been signed into Law. The Nigeria Labour Congress will not waver in its duty to protect the rights of workers and the freedom of all Nigerians,” the communique added.

  • BREAKING: NLC submits fresh demands to FG

    BREAKING: NLC submits fresh demands to FG

    Following Monday’s arrest and detention of Comrade Joe Ajaero, President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the labour union has submitted fresh demands to the federal government.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the NLC in a post via X (formerly Twitter) demanded the immediate and unconditional release of Comrade Ajaero, while asking for the immediate implementation of the new national minimum wage.

    The labour union also demanded for the immediate reversal of the pump price of petrol and also the reversal of the hike in electricity tariff, which the NLC described as illegal.

    Recall that Ajaero was arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS) on Monday at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport on his way to the UK for a TUC meeting.

    Mr Benson Upah, NLC Head of Information, said this in a statement on Monday in Abuja. Upah said that Ajaero was seized and whisked away by agents of the Nigerian State while on his way to the Uk,  on the invitation of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) of Britain.

    He said that Ajaero was set to attend and address the global gathering of workers, on behalf of Nigerian workers at the  TUC in the UK. According to him, in light of this troubling development, the congress puts all its affiliates, State Councils, Civil society allies and all patriotic Nigerians on the highest state of alert.

    ”The congress will not stand idly by while the rights of its leaders and members are trampled upon. Accordingly, we demand for the immediate and unconditional release of comrade  Ajaero.

    “We call on the international community, human rights organisations, and all advocates of democracy to take note of this rising wave of authoritarianism in Nigeria.

    ”The world must bear witness to these assaults on human dignity, civil liberties, and the rule of law. The NLC remains resolute in its commitment to protecting workers’ rights and will not be cowed by the oppressive tactics of the state.

    “We demand the immediate and unconditional release of  Ajaero and the cessation of all forms of harassment against labour leaders and the Nigerian working class, including innocent,”he said.

    Upah said that the congress was yet to ascertain its president whereabouts or state of health,  as all efforts  made to get in touch with him had proved abortive.

    ”We  wish to categorically state that Comrade Ajaero has been detained without any legal warrant or formal instrument. His detention is a brazen act of intimidation and completely unjustified under the laws of our nation.

    “The mere contemplation of not just stopping a lawful citizen from travelling but also sequestering his freedom, is an affront to our democratic and natural rights as a people and as workers,’”he said.

    He said that the NLC is also  demanding  the release all Nigerians languishing in various prisons around the country,  for exercising their democratic rights to protest in the #EndBadGovernance  around the country.

    “Finally, the organs of the congress are in a closed door meeting whose outcome will be made available to the public,”he said.

  • Ajaero arrest: International labour union reacts

    Ajaero arrest: International labour union reacts

    The regional arm of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) in Africa has condemned the arrest and detention of Comrade Joe Ajaero, President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Comrade Ajaero was arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS) on Monday at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport in Abuja while he was on his way to the United Kingdom (UK) for a TUC meeting.

    ITUC-Africa in a statement via X (formerly Twitter), stated “@ituc_africa unequivocally condemns the Nigerian Government’s alarming and unrelenting harassment of NLC leadership. As we write, the Nigerian Government has unlawfully detained the NLC President, Comrade Joe Ajaero”.

    Similarly, Amnesty International has described the arrest of the NLC President as a new record of impunity, stating “President Tinubu is setting a new record of utter disregard for the rule of law”.

    Responding to the unlawful arrest of the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, by the Department of State Services (DSS), Isa Sanusi, Director of Amnesty International Nigeria, said:

    “Amnesty International strongly condemns the unlawful arrest of the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, by the Department of State Services (DSS) today. The labour union leader must be immediately and unconditionally released.”

    “The arbitrary arrest of Joe Ajaero shows an escalating crackdown on human rights and restrictions on civic space by the government of President Bola Tinubu.”

    “President Bola Tinubu’s government persistently attacks and undermines the operations of the NLC through fabricated allegations, raids on NLC headquarters, and other forms of harassment and intimidation. This growing culture of impunity and disdain for workers’ rights to organize and seek better welfare must stop.”

    “Amnesty International has observed, in the last year, the increasing crackdown by Nigerian authorities on the labour union and civic space. The authorities continue to weaponize the police and DSS to repress the human rights of Nigerians.”

    “Nigeria is a party to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which guarantee the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, and association, including trade union membership and activities. The country is also a member of the International Labour Organization, whose fundamental principles, including the right to organize, are binding on all members.”

    “Under international human rights law, workers cannot be targeted for participating in trade union activities. The Nigerian authorities have an obligation not only to respect the rights of workers but also to protect these rights from abuse.”

    “Joe Ajaero was arrested solely for the peaceful exercise of his human rights and must be immediately and unconditionally released.”

  • Just in: NLC in emergency meeting over Ajaero’s arrest

    Just in: NLC in emergency meeting over Ajaero’s arrest

    The Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC is in a closed door session over the arrest of its president, Comrade Joe Ajaero by DSS

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports Head of Public Relations, NLC, Benson Upah, made this known in an interview with journalists on Monday.

    According to Upah, agents of the Nigerian State seized Ajaero without a legal warrant or formal instrument, and his whereabouts and health status are currently unknown.

    The NLC has condemned the detention as a “brazen act of lawlessness and intimidation” and demanded Ajaero’s immediate and unconditional release.

    “The Congress has also called on the international community, human rights organizations, and democracy advocates to take note of the rising wave of authoritarianism in Nigeria.

    Ajaero was set to address the Trade Union Congress in the UK on behalf of Nigerian workers, discussing critical issues like workers’ rights, social justice, and economic fairness.

    Upah said, “The NLC has put its affiliates, state councils, and civil society allies on high alert and vowed to protect workers’ rights and not be cowed by oppressive tactics.

    “The Congress is currently holding a closed-door meeting to discuss the situation, and the outcome will be made public soon.”

  • UPDATE: NLC fumes over arrest of Ajaero, reveals next line of action

    UPDATE: NLC fumes over arrest of Ajaero, reveals next line of action

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has said it would not sit idly by while the rights of its leaders, Comrade Joe Ajaero and other members of the labour union are trampled upon. NLC disclosed its organs are already in a closed door meeting whose outcome will be made available to the public.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports NLC President, Comrade Ajaero was arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS) at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja on Monday.

    “In light of this troubling development, the Congress puts all its affiliates, State Councils, Civil society allies and all patriotic Nigerians on the highest state of alert. The Congress will not stand idly by while the rights of its leaders and members are trampled upon. Accordingly, we demand for the immediate and unconditional release of comrade Joe Ajaero,” NLC disclosed in a statement by Benson Upah, Head of Information and Public Affairs.

    Ajaero was seized and whisked away by agents of the Nigerian State while on his way to the United Kingdom (UK) on the invitation of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) of Britain. Comrade Ajaero was set to attend and address the global gathering of workers on behalf of Nigerian workers at the Congress of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) in the UK, a platform where critical discussions on workers’ rights, social justice, and economic fairness are discussed.

    “We are yet to ascertain his whereabouts or his state of health as all efforts we have made to get in touch with him have proved abortive,” NLC revealed in the statement, following the arrest of Ajaero.

    The statement reads: “We wish to categorically state that Comrade Ajaero has been detained without any legal warrant or formal instrument. Joe Ajaero is not a fugitive. His detention is therefore a brazen act of lawlessness and intimidation as he has not been declared wanted by any law enforcement body. His detention is a brazen act of intimidation and completely unjustified under the laws of our nation.

    “The mere contemplation of not just stopping a lawful citizen from travelling but also sequestering his freedom is an affront to our democratic and natural rights as a people and as workers.

    “This is an unmistakable demonstration of the height of lawlessness being perpetuated by the Nigerian government and its agencies in their bid to silence every voice of dissent and opposition in the country as the economic policies of the government continues to afflict the people with monumental suffering and hardship. Such actions are not only undemocratic but immoral as well as a direct affront to the fundamental rights of citizens and organizations to lawfully express their views and carry out their activities.

    “In light of this troubling development, the Congress puts all its affiliates, State Councils, Civil society allies and all patriotic Nigerians on the highest state of alert. The Congress will not stand idly by while the rights of its leaders and members are trampled upon. Accordingly, we demand for the immediate and unconditional release of comrade Joe Ajaero.

    “Furthermore, we call on the international community, human rights organizations, and all advocates of democracy to take note of this rising wave of authoritarianism in Nigeria. The world must bear witness to these assaults on human dignity, civil liberties, and the rule of law.

    “The NLC remains resolute in its commitment to protecting workers’ rights and will not be cowed by the oppressive tactics of the state. Once again, we demand the immediate and unconditional release of Comrade Joe Ajaero and the cessation of all forms of harassment against labour leaders and the Nigerian working class including innocent citizens who hold dissenting opinions.

    “We equally demand that the state frees all Nigerians languishing in various prisons around the country for exercising their democratic rights to protest in the #EndBadGovernance rallies around the country. Finally, the Organs of the Congress are in a closed door meeting whose outcome will be made available to the public”.