Uncategorized

Minimum wage: Labour lists offending states, plans street protests, talks

 ***Ekiti, Kogi, Imo, Zamfara, four others yet to begin wage implementation

 ***Petrol/electricity tariff hikes: Talks resume Friday, palliatives plan on agenda

Negotiations on the N30,000 minimum wage, which were  suspended in some states   in the wake of COVID-19  outbreak  in March,  would resume this week.

The PUNCH gathered on Monday that workers in no fewer than eight  states  had yet to be paid  the  minimum wage nine months after the deadline the Nigeria Labour Congress gave state governments.

Labour leaders told The PUNCH that  Osun, Kwara, Ekiti, Imo, Gombe, Kogi, Zamfara  and Ebonyi  state governments had not started the minimum wage implementation.

Findings  indicated  in states, where  minimum wage negotiations  had been concluded,  workers  were demanding fresh talks in view of the hikes in the fuel price and electricity tariff.

The Trade Union Congress said together with the  NLC it  would stage  street protests in states where implementation of the minimum wage had  not started.

It said such protests were held in Rivers and Ogun states, a few days ago, adding that workers would storm Imo State soon for the minimum wage protests.

Although the new minimum wage bill  was signed by the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.),   into law on April 18, 2019,  both labour and the Federal Government did not agree on consequential adjustment of workers’ salaries until October 17, 2019.

In October, the Federal Government and the NLC agreed on 23.2 percentage increase for workers at grade level 07; 20 per cent for those at grade level 08; 19 per cent for workers at grade level 09; 16 per cent for those on levels 10 to 14; and 14 per cent for workers at grade levels 15 to 17.

In a communiqué issued after its meeting on December 11, 2019, the NLC gave state governments a  December 31 deadline to conclude negotiations on the minimum wage.

It was learnt that the fuel price hike had brought to the fore the issue of minimum wage in states, where it had not been implemented.

Petrol price hike: Osun  workers demand fresh terms as talks begin on Thursday

In Osun State, the Chairman of the NLC, Jacob Adekomi, told one of our correspondents that labour leaders and the state government would resume minimum wage negotiations on Thursday.

According to him, the state Governor, Gboyega Oyetola, during a meeting on Sunday  told the labour leaders to work out the financial implications of their demands and submit them to the state government.

Adekomi explained that in  December,   a committee consisting of government and Labour representatives was set up.

He stated, “Recently, we met with the commissioner for finance and Mr Governor on the need to go back to the negotiation table and finalise the agreement we reached before. But with what is on the ground now, we have to start all over again because of the hikes in electricity tariff and petroleum price.

In  Kogi Sate, the NLC   Chairman, Onu Edoka in a chat with one of  our correspondents on the  telephone, said negotiations would resume on this week.

Edoka said activities of  a 17-man negotiating committee set up  by the state government  were stalled because  COVID-19 pandemic in March.

On its part, the Chief of Staff to the state governor, Asuku Jamiu, in an interview with The PUNCH,  said labour leaders were part of the negotiations.

Kwara workers write  gov, demand minimum wage

The Chairman of the Kwara  State Joint Negotiating Council,  Saliu Sulaiman,  told The PUNCH that workers in the state had written the state Governor, ,Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq, asking him to sign the minimum wage bill and begin its implementation.

He said although  labour leaders  and the state government had agreed on  modalities for implementing  the new minimum, he said the payment  was suspended as a result of outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic.

Sulaiman stated, “Apart from COVID-19,  hikes  in electricity tariff and fuel pump price have also made the current salary earned by workers in the state to be meaningless.”

“We met last week and one of the issues we discussed was the minimum wage which the government has yet to implement. We have written a letter to the governor to sign the collective agreement.”

In  Sokoto State, the NLC Chairman,   Ahmed Umar,  in an interview with one of  our correspondents in Sokoto said the state government began the payment of the new minimum wage in January.

He, however,  said the payment had not started in local government areas because of   the bloated  “staff strength”  in the LGAs.

Ekiti workers to write state govt

Also,  the NLC in Ekiti State said the state government had not concluded talks with workers on the minimum wage.

The NLC Secretary  in  the state, Taiwo Akinyemi, in an interview with The PUNCH,  said negotiations  would soon resume in the state.

Akinyemi said since COVID-19 infection, which was the reason the negotiation was suspended was already thinning out, the NLC would write the government on the need to conclude the negotiation.

The Enugu  State Chairman of the NLC,  Virginus Nwobodo, on his part  said the minimum wage implementation in the state had started.

He, however, said inflation had made a mess of it. “Enugu State Government has started minimum wage implementation.” He however, noted that the  minimum wage had been greatly affected by  inflation

But  in a telephone interview with one of  our correspondents, the Bauchi State Chairman of the NLC,  Danjuma Saleh, said negotiations  with the state government had not been concluded before the COVID-19 lockdown.

He stated, “We reached an  agreement   six to seven months ago and workers from level six down have been getting the minimum wage. It is only salaries of  senior staff from level seven upwards that we have not agreed on. We will soon resume the negotiations.”

The  Gombe State Chairman of the NLC, Mohammed Adamu,  said,  “We have resumed talks but we have yet to conclude them. We have not reached the stage to plot a strike as we hope to conclude discussion on resumption of payment before the end of this  month.”

Recall that Gombe is one of the few states that adopted the 30,000 minimum wage, but suspended  its implementation  due to the impact of COVID-19.

In Oyo State, the acting s Chairman of the NLC, Mr Kayode Martins, told The PUNCH that the  majority of the workers were  being paid the new minimum wage.

He, however, said some departments, higher institutions and agencies were still taking the old salaries.

But the NLC in Ebonyi State is divided. The NLC Chairman, Ikechukwu Nwafor, who is recognised by the national leadership of the congress, said the state government had not negotiated  with the state chapter.

Nwafor,  in a telephone interview with our one of  correspondents in Abakaliki  said  efforts of the NLC to negotiate  with  the state government failed.

Nwafor said, “I didn’t negotiate with the  Ebonyi State Government. They didn’t allow negotiations. They called some people and made them to sign some documents.

“The people negotiated with them and agreed on a table that they have been using to pay people. They went and did it as a hidden thing when I was writing the governor to come up with a negotiation team and all of a sudden they said they had paid the minimum wage.

“The minimum wage is not being implemented in this state. We have the table and we can make it available for you;  what Ebonyi has been paying before now, what it is paying now and what it should be paying after now.

But the factional Chairman,  Mr Leonard Nkah, told The PUNCH that “the negotiation on the national minimum wage was concluded about one year ago. We are enjoying the national minimum wage in Ebonyi State, and workers are not just happy with it.”

The  Zamfara State Chairman of the congress,  Bashir Mafara, said negotiations on the minimum wage had been concluded but implementation had not begun.

The chairman said  the committee set up by the state government had  submitted its report to state Governor, Bello Matawalle.

Also, the Kano State Government has yet to refund salaries  of workers it deducted for three months after it started the implementation of the  minimum in December 2019.

A reliable source told The  PUNCH that the state government promised to refund the deductions before the end of August 2020, but it had yet to fulfil the promise.

Recall that the state chapter of  NLC, had on Wednesday, May 27, 2020 threatened to embark on a strike over the May salary pay cut.

A source said, “The state government deducted the workers’ salaries in May, June and July. It was only in August the deduction was not made.”

Following the dwindling revenues arising from the COVID-19 pandemic, the state government slashed workers’ salaries which the state NLC kicked against.

The state NLC while reacting on the development, had described the  state government’s action as a violation of the existing minimum wage law 2019.

However,  following an  agreement  between the union and the Kano State Government, the workers  suspended their planned strike.

However, all efforts to contact the state NLC chairman,  Kabiru Ado-Minjibir,  to comment on the situation failed as did not  pick phone calls from The PUNCH.

But a competent source at the state ministry of finance said  it was the labour union that was supposed to know when the workers’ money would be refunded.

Meanwhile, the TUC and the NLC  have concluded plans to hold a massive protest in Imo State to compel the state government to implement the minimum wage.

The TUC President, Mr Quadri Olaleye, said the organised labour would soon arrive in the state in solidarity with the workers who he said were being denied their rights and benefits by the government.

Speaking to one of our correspondents on Monday on the refusal of about eight  states to implement the minimum wage, the union leader said the TUC and NLC would deal with the errant states.

He stated that the unions had addressed the delay in implementing the bill in Rivers and Ogun States, noting that the former would start paying the minimum wage this month.

The TUC and NLC had planned a major street protest in Port Harcourt, the state capital, but it was shelved following calls for dialogue by the state government.

The meeting subsequently agreed on the implementation of the minimum wage, prompting the organised labour to shelve the rally.

Olaleye said, “I’m sure you are aware of what happened in Rivers State and Ogun states last week. We are taking it one by one. We have resolved that of Rivers state, they would start paying this month. The remaining five or six states, we are going to deal with them jointly with the NLC. Imo Sate is next, that is where the action would be.”

Labour writes FG on states’ failure to pay minimum wage

He further explained that the failure of some states to pay the minimum wage was part of the demands presented to the Federal Government during their meeting with the FG team on the hikes in the prices of petroleum products and electricity tariffs, in Abuja last Tuesday.

He added, “We already reported to the Federal Government in the letter of ultimatum we gave them that they should mandate all states that have not paid the minimum wage to implement it immediately.”

The TUC disclosed that the labour movement would again meet with the FG officials to further discuss the hikes in electricity tariffs and fuel pump price.

It said the government was expected to unfold its plans and palliatives to address the socio-economic impact of the increase on Nigerians.

The TUC leader stated, “We have not discussed those who have not been paying the minimum wage issue with the Federal Government, we only mentioned it during our presentation. So, at the meeting, they would give us their plan. I think we should be meeting by Friday this week.”