Tag: Strike Action

  • Lagos commercial drivers to embark on strike from Monday

    Lagos commercial drivers to embark on strike from Monday

    Movement in and out of Lagos may prove extremely difficult starting from Monday as the Lagos commercial drivers under the aegis of the Joint Drivers ‘Welfare  Association of  Nigeria have intensified preparations to embark on strike action in the state after citing extortion from motor parks and transport unions.
    This was made known at a press conference held in Ikeja Lagos over the weekend.
    The drivers also cited many unfavourable conditions that are making work difficult for them in the state.
    ”We make this distinction as a point of divergence from the “transport unions”, who are made up of individuals who do not earn their living as drivers.
    ”We are saddened that despite our dedication to our work, we have been subjected to indiscriminate extortion and violent harassment by the management.
    ”As commercial drivers in Lagos State under the aegis of the Joint Drivers Welfare Association of Nigeria (JDWAN), we are left with no choice than. to embark on seven days of protest and boycott of services across the over multiple and excessive extortions by the management of parks and garages in the state.
    ”We have called this Press Conference to notify members of the public and the Lagos state government over multiple and excessive extortions by the motor parks and garages management.
    “The cost of transportation affects the cost of goods and services and consequently the cost of living, which has spiraled astronomically in Lagos State as a result of the effect of motor parks excessive and illegal ticketing and tolling at almost every bus stop.
    “We have been sentenced to the extortion and violent harassment of the state transport agencies – Lagos State motor parks and garages management and Lagos State caretaker committee.
    “Daily, we lose half of our income to the motor park boys. We pay exorbitant charges in the garages and at every bus stop where we drop off passengers, whether we pick up passengers or not, we pay morning, afternoon, and night. Some routes have 25 bus stops which also serve as illegal tax collection avenues.
    “We crave the indulgence of the public to go through the meticulous breakdown of this unprecedented level of extortion we go through below:
    “From Badagry to Mile 2, we pay N3,500 & N5,000 naira apart from 25 illegal tolling/ticketing by motorpark hoodlums who collect two to three hundred naira per bus. From Seme in their park, they do collect N7,100 in the morning before loading our buses yet we are still subject to illegal collection on the highway.
    “On Federal Mass & Coaster, we pay over N12,000 on each trip from Oko Afo to CMS or to Oyingbo, which includes loading charges and illegal payments at several bus stops till we get to our destination.
    “From Ogijo to Ikorodu, we pay over N5,500 per day. Garage Ticket N850, Chairman ticket N1,700, King’s levy N200, Ita Oluwo N500, Odo Gunyon N1,200, Ile Epo Oba N200. We also pay N900 for passIng by whether you pick up a passenger or not.
    (At Ikorodu Roundabout we pay N1,000 in the morning and afternoon and we pay N500 in the evening which makes it N2,500. At Benson Bus Stop we pay N900 for a whole day, loading at N300 each for morning, afternoon, and evening.
    “At Agric Bus Stop we pay N200 to 8 motor park thugs. It is called welcome to Agric tax. When we stop to load for passengers at the agric bus stop we pay an extra N300 which isn’t part of the N1,600 welcome to Agric tax. When we get to Aunty Kenny bus stop we pay N200 before buying Lagos state ticket for N500.
    “” At Ogolonto bus stop we pay N100. At Mile 12 bus stop we pay N500 for plying the expressway and N1,000 for plying service lane (for buses en route to Yaba oyingbo). Mile 12 to Ojuelegba buses pay N1,500 while red coaster buses pay N2,000.
    “Red buses from Ikorodu to Oshodi pay N5,000 to motor park boys in the morning and afternoon. At Ketu bus stop we pay between N600 to N1,000 depending on the size of the bus for just dropping off passengers or picking up any single one. For buses plying from Yaba to Ikeja, we pay N200 at Jibowu bus stop, total bus stop N100, Fadeyi N100, Onipanu N200, Elediye N200, Palmgrove N200, Anthony N100, Ikeja N200 – total N1,300.
    “On our way back to Yaba, Palmgrove & Onipanu is N500, Fadeyi & Total N500, Yaba N200 with LASG N800 ticket making it a total of N3,300 in the morning alone. We pay N2,000 each in the afternoon and evening, which makes a total of N7,300 daily. Korope plying lyana Iba-Okoko to Agbara are paying N5,000 per day to motor park boys without the extra LASTMA & Police Department & Lagos Task Force daily extortion.
    “When we resist the extortion, we get arrested and pay N10,000 for bail to the police while the motor park boys go scot free and we also have to bail our buses separately.
    “Lagos drivers also pay for entertainment, security, unit chairman’s food, and many other ridiculous levies with the threat of violence at any slight refusal by the drivers. This is the exact case of the popular parlance on the exploitation of labourers, “baboon dey work and monkey dey chop”.
    “Lagos commercial drivers work like elephants and eat like ants while the urchins under the aegis of motor park workers take a large chunk of our earnings. We can hardly fulfill our contractual obligations with our business partners, feed our family, or afford maintenance or repair of our vehicles.
    “Our demands are: No to charging drivers three passengers money after loading in parks or garages, we are demanding it should be one passenger’s money per bus. We demand that only the Lagos State government ticket should be the only ticket in Lagos. Others like Lagos State parks & garages management, and Lagos State caretaker committee are not acceptable to all drivers in Lagos State.
    “We kick against Paying motor park thugs at every bus stop. All illegal money paid after we leave the garages and parks should be abolished immediately. Harassment of law enforcement agencies & intimidation with guns, cutlass and broken bottles by LASTMA, task force, and RRS must end immediately. They collaborate and hire thugs to attack and extort us every day without violating any law.
    “We have lesser bus stops for commercial vehicles. Most bus stops in Lagos are strictly assigned officially to brt buses only and we get arrested for dropping off passengers at existing bus stops which are known to commuters as official bus stops for decades. We demand that the Lagos State government should provide official bus stops in each community to avoid incessant arrests and stress for commuters who complain of having to trek several kilometres back to their bus stops.
    “We call on the Lagos State government to quickly respond to avert the current anomaly. Failure to adhere to these demands will only attract more protest and total boycott, the Joint driver’s welfare association of Nigeria (JDWAN) is resolute in pursuing justice by all legitimate and peaceful means available.”
  • ASUU Strike: NANS threaten to shut down airports in the country

    ASUU Strike: NANS threaten to shut down airports in the country

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has threatened to close down all International airports in the country following a seven month strike embarked upon by Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU)

    The leadership of NANS met in Akure the Ondo state capital over the weekend to discuss way forward and measures to resolve the lingering industrial action embarked upon by ASUU.

    The body condemned the Federal Government’s attitude towards resolving the strike action by the Public university lecturers.

    The Students noted that the four-day closure of highways and expressways was a success, which is why they decided to stop international travel beginning on September 19, 2022, so that the bourgeois and the government would experience the suffering that students had gone through for the previous seven months.

    The NANS National Task Force on “End ASUU Strike Now” Chairman, Ojo Raymond Olumide, revealed that students were already tired of pleading with both parties about the necessity of ending the strike during a press conference.

    “The President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration must settle all outstanding arrears and the lecturers’ salaries”, Olumide said, adding that the airports that would be occupied will remain closed until the strike is called off.

    “We shall begin another round of protest next week by storming the airspaces on Monday, 19th September 2022 to #OccupyTheAirports. We want to let the world know about the pains and anguish students are going through.

    “Nigerian students whose parents create the commonwealth cannot continue to be suffering at home alongside our lecturers while the few who gain from our sweats and blood have their kids abroad jollying and flexing.

    “We will, by this statement, not beg again. We shall be mobilizing all students to shut down the country. No Education! No Movement!”

    NANS attacked Minister of Works, Babatunde Raji Fashola over his comment on the barricade of expressway by the students.

    They passed a vote of no confidence on the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Chris Ngige and his Education counterpart Adamu Adamu.

    ASUU has embarked on industrial action since February 14, 2022.

     

  • ASUU strike beyond NANS –  NANS President

    ASUU strike beyond NANS – NANS President

    The President of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Sunday Ashefon, has said the ongoing strike action embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) was beyond the body to resolve.

    Asheton made the statement on Thursday during the 40th Anniversary the association and described the strike actions in the tertiary education sector in Nigeria as a challenge that administrations of the student body will not be able to resolve.

    “Perhaps the tertiary education sector in Nigeria is faced with one of the strongest tests in our history in the last few years. We have witnessed the total collapse of the sector as a result of the incessant strike,” he said.

    He further stressed that “This challenge alone is bigger than what any NANS administration could resolve. However, our nation’s education system is on the brink and the entire nation must rise to the rescue. Where we go from here as a nation is dependent on how we collectively gather the crackers of the collapsing education system and rebuild it together as a nation.

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    “Nigeria does not belong here, our tertiary education system does not belong here and this is already taking its tore on the nation’s economy, security, and faith of the young people in the nation and its education system. We all must rise to the rescue.

    “As we celebrate today, let us remember that we are only gathered here because education is part of our story and life, we must therefore do all it takes to ensure this part of our national life does not become a story of the past.”

  • ASUU to meet Federal Government today, may call-off strike

    ASUU to meet Federal Government today, may call-off strike

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the federal government of Nigeria will meet on Tuesday over its ongoing strike action.

    ASUU president, Professor Emmanuel Osodeke, made this disclosure when featuring on Channels Television’s Politics Today, he said the meeting was to discuss one of the demands the university lecturers have tabled before the federal government.

    “That’s the issue of renegotiation,” Osodeke said.

    “The renegotiation of the 2009 agreement.

    “It’s not just about wages. It has to do with the system, funding, structure, autonomy, and other issues and how to fund universities.

    “The government has reduced it to just salaries alone. But if they had looked at the whole agreement and implemented it, we would not be talking about funding.”

    Osodeke also suggested that if Tuesday’s meeting goes well, the strike action may be called off.

    “We are willing to sign,” he added.

    ASUU declared a warning strike on February 14 2022 before embarking on indefinite strike action to press home their demands and the 2009 agreement entered into by both parties.

    The striking university lecturers have been asking for the revitalization of public universities, earned academic allowances, University Transparency Accountability Solution, (UTAS) promotion arrears, and others.

    Meanwhile, their college of Education counterparts has called off their 2 months old strike after agreeing with the Federal Government.

  • College of Education lecturers suspends 60 days  strike

    College of Education lecturers suspends 60 days strike

    The Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union, (COEASU) lecturers have suspended their two month-old strike .

    COEASU President, Dr Smart Olugbeko and the General Secretary of the union, Dr Ahmed Bazza made the announcement via a statement on Friday.

    They said the  strike was called off following “enormous progress” made at the ongoing renegotiation with the Federal Government.

    ”The decision to suspend the strike was taken at the end of its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting held in Abuja, to re-assess the status of issues leading to the three-week roll-over of the national strike,” they said.

    “The NEC resolved that the nationwide strike action which commenced on June 10, 2022 be suspended for a cool-off period of 60 days to give government the opportunity to perfect the progress made so far into tangible achievements that are acceptable to the union after which the NEC shall reconvene to reassess the status of the issues and decide the way forward,” the union said in a statement signed by the general secretary, Dr Ahmed Lawan.

    Olugbeko further stated that the enormous progress made at the ongoing renegotiation and the appreciable level of progress made towards the amendment of the Colleges of Education Establishment Act, were paramount for the development of the COE system.

    He added that the suspension will give the government the opportunity to perfect the progress made so far and NEC will reconvene to re-assess the status of the issues and decide the way forward.

    Olugbeko commended critical stakeholders for their intervention and dogged commitment to the resolution of the issues.

    Olugbeko commended critical stakeholders for their intervention and dogged commitment to the resolution of the issues.

    The union like the Academic Staff Union of Universities requested that the government adopt the University Transparency Accountability System for the payment of salaries and allowances of lecturers

  • GHANA: CLOGSAG calls off strike, as members resume work on Monday

    GHANA: CLOGSAG calls off strike, as members resume work on Monday

    Members of the Civil and Local Government Staff Association, Ghana (CLOGSAG) would return to work on Monday, April 25, 2022 following the Unions calling off its strike action.

     

    Head of the Local Government Service, Nana Ato Arthur, disclosed that members will return to work next week Monday.

     

    “CLOGSAG actually agreed to the government’s plea for them to call off the strike,” he said.

     

    Nana Ato Arthur further explained, “What is left is that because the Minister of Finance is not in the country, the deputy minister is to contact the Minister, and then a letter will be written to consolidate all the decisions taken yesterday.

     

    “When that letter is signed, the executive of CLOGSAG and all the civil and local government staff will return to work, so my believe is that if the letter gets to them by close of work today (Friday) hopefully on Monday CLOGSAG will call off the strike.”

     

    Following an engagement with officials from the government side, the leadership of CLOGSAG agreed to call off the strike.

     

    CLOGSAG on Thursday, April 21, 2022, laid down tools to signal the commencement of an indefinite strike to protest the non-payment of the neutrality allowance as agreed with the government.

     

    Earlier on, the National Labour Commission explained the strike action by CLOGSAG as illegal.

  • Why we didn’t call-off strike – ASUU

    Why we didn’t call-off strike – ASUU

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities, (ASUU) Lagos chapter has warned the federal government that the continuous rejection of University Transparency and Accountability Solution (UTAS) by the National Information Technology Development Agency will continue to elongate the strike embarked upon by public Universities lecturer.

    ASUU has made it clear that the strike would not be called off until government sees reasons with UTAS and implements the renegotiated agreement.

    Speaking at a press briefing held at the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, on Tuesday, the coordinator of ASUU Lagos Zone, Adelaja Odukoya, insisted that the UTAS proposed by the union passed the test and quality assurance requirements, having scored 99.3 per cent.

    Odukoya described the rejection as an attempt to play politics with the public universities

    He added that the federal government is engaging in deliberate attempt to discredit UTAS which has been proven very credible.

    He urged Nigerians to join the union in the fight to meet their demands.

    He said, “We, however, wish to draw the attention of all concerned to the deliberate misinformation and disinformation of the public by the National Information Technology and Development Agency on the state of the integrity test

    “The utterances of the NITDA spokesperson are capable of deliberate elongation of the ongoing strike action, suppose the government allows itself to be misinformed and misdirected through the managerial incompetence of the NITDA officers. In that case, our union considers it the peak of insensitivity to the plight of the universities, including staff, students, and indeed the country.

    “Nonetheless, it is the considered opinion of our union that we owe the Nigerian people the onerous responsibility of providing the truth in discharging our patriotic duty as Nigerian Academic and the intellectual conscience of the Nigerian state.

    ASUU, therefore, wants the Nigerian public to call the DG, NITDA to order on the point of integrity not to play politics and vendetta with the future of Nigeria and that of our public universities as National treasures and collective patrimony of all Nigerian citizens. We are convinced that the DG of NITDA is only out to carry out the hatchet job of a Minister whose professional fraud was challenged by our union.

    “ASUU wants to inform you that the current strike action will not be suspended until the government addresses the adoption of UTAS, implement the renegotiated agreement, pay all outstanding allowances without prejudice to the donation of $1 million to Afghanistan and fulfill all other issues contained in the Memorandum of Action signed with our Union

     

     

  • Minimum wage: Again, NLC threatens strike action if…

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Friday directed its members to be ready to take appropriate actions should the National Assembly fail to do the needful by affirming N30,000 as the new national minimum wage at state and federal levels.

    It said the National Assembly should uphold the recommendation of the tripartite committee which specified N30,000 as the new national minimum wage.

    President of the congress, Comrade Ayuba Wabba, told reporters at the end of an emergency meeting of the Central Working Committee of the congress yesterday that the International Labour Organization (ILO) conventions guiding negotiations on minimum wage do not allow one party to change the figures agreed upon after negotiations.

    The process of changing the figure agreed upon after negotiations, he said, must follow the same process of negotiations in accordance with international best practices and in accordance with ILO conventions.

    He insisted that even the N30,000 agreed to by the tripartite committee was a compromise position for which labour should be commended as it is still less than 100 dollars if converted.

    Wabba said: “This is the resolution that has just been adopted by a meeting of the Central Working Committee of the Nigeria Labour Congress. The meeting deliberated on a one-item agenda which is the issue of the transmission of the national minimum wage bill to the National Assembly.

    The meeting reviewed the whole situation, including the fact that what was agreed at the tripartite negotiation meeting of the review of the minimum wage was N30,000. It is actually out of place and out of procedure for that figure to be reduced to N27,000. “