Nigerian workers under the aegis of the Nigerian Labour Congress and
its affiliate organizations marched in Lagos, Tuesday, over non payment
of their members salaries in over 20 states across the country.
The workers singled out Governors Rochas Okorocha, Tanko Al-Makura,
and Samuel Ortom of Imo, Nasarawa, and Benue respectively for ridicule,
accusing them of behaving like slave masters.
“This protest is to make a point that our governors, some of them,
are becoming slave masters. They are no more governors,” said Isa Aremu,
General Secretary of the Textile Workers Union.
“These three governors who are behaving like slave masters, namely
Rochas Okorocha, Al-Makura, Ortom. I think we should use today to call
on President Muhammadu Buhari to call these governors to order.
“Because Labour issues are federal issues, they are on the exclusive
list, not on concurrent list. No governor, no private employer should
tamper with Labour issues. When it comes to salaries and terms of
employment, it’s a federal law, and Nigerian laws are clear, it’s
unconstitutional.”
The workers, with black clothes tied round their arms, marched
through Maryland to Ikeja roundabout, grounding vehicular traffic as
songs from the late Afro beat king, Fela Anikulapo Kuti, blared from
giant loudspeakers.
The workers said they were also protesting the death of two of their
members in Nasarawa State who were allegedly shot dead by the police
during a meeting with Mr. Al-Makura, last month.
A minute silence was observed for the late workers.
“Or even if he had done the consultation, you don’t consult people to kill them. You can’t consult on cutting of salaries. So what Al-Makura has done is illegal and it’s criminal.
“Not only that, he threatened the workers. That if they refuse to accept the wage cut, he will sack all of them and replace them with what he called fresh graduates. And I was wondering, which fresh graduates will accept salaries that will be cut by 50 percent.
“The leadership of the NLC decided to intervene. And when they went there, the meeting was going on at the Government House, some police opened fire on the workers who were waiting for the outcome of the discussion. In the process, two workers were killed, and about three or four were seriously injured.”
The NLC leadership demanded that Mr. Al-Makura pay full compensation to the survivors and dependants of the killed workers.
“I also want to reaffirm that immediately Governor Al-Makura should withdraw the criminal 50 percent reduction in salaries of Nasarawa workers,” Mr. Aremu said.
“And that will be the condition for the suspension of the strikes that is going on today in Nasarawa.”
The workers also criticised the three-day work and two-day farm policy recently introduced by Mr. Okorocha.
The Imo State governor had announced a reduction in the working days of the week, from five days to three days. He told the workers to use the remaining two days for farming.
“Comrades, let me reaffirm here that Nigerian workers are Nigerian workers, they are not emergency farmers,” Mr. Aremu said.
“You gave workers letters of appointment as a clerk, messenger, driver, supervisor, nurses, teachers. You have not given them letters of appointments to become farmers.
“In any case, how can a governor remain in Owerri, in the Government House, and ask all the workers to return back to the farms? He himself should be in the farm first. So if the governor is not a farmer, a worker is not a farmer.”
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