The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has called on state councils and
industrial union affiliates to be prepared for a showdown with any
state
government that attempts to reduce the national minimum wage.
The call was made in a statement issued by NLC President, Mr Ayuba Wabba, in Abuja.
The statement said the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Chaired by Gov.
Abdulaziz Yari of Zamfara state, had insinuated plans by state governors
to reduce the N18, 000 national minimum wage.
It noted that Gov. Yari, had said if there was no reduction in the
national wage, the states would embark on massive retrenchment of
workers, saying that due to the fall in the price of crude oil at the
international market state governments are no longer in the position to
pay the legal minimum wage to their workers.
The statement said “The Nigeria Labour Congress wishes to
categorically affirm that the path our governors are headed can only
lead to one outcome: a head-on collision with Nigerian workers and
Nigerian people.’’
It noted that the minimum wage was the minimum salary a worker was
envisaged to earn to sustain himself and dependants over a daily or
monthly period.
The statement added that taken a simple arithmetic terms, N18, 000
divided by six persons over 30 days amounts to N100 per day per person
or N600 for the six persons per day and this amount is expected to feed
six people daily while they have to find some amount from the same wage
for accommodation, healthcare, transportation, education, among others.
It said the political elite did not find anything wrong in earning
uniform wages and allowances across board irrespective of the state of
natural endowments.
It stressed that no amount of threat would stop the congress from insisting on an enforceable national minimum wage.
It also commend the governors of Edo, Rivers, Jigawa and Ekiti states
and others who have dissociated themselves from the insensitive and
economically illogical campaign by the chairman of the Governors’ Forum.
the statement said, “the campaign to discard the 2011 National
Minimum Wage Act or on the alternative throw more workers into the
already saturated unemployment market is totally unacceptable. ‘’
It called on the ruling APC and the opposition PDP to call their governors to order.
It said any attempt to default on the payment of the N18, 000
national minimum wage or engage in any mass retrenchment of workers in
states, the country would be thrown into an industrial disharmony
Monday, 7 December 2015
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