Tuesday 20 November 2012

NLC President Insists Nigerians must Mobilize against Fuel Price Increase!


GOODWILL MESSAGE PRESENTED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE NIGERIA LABOUR CONGRESS, COMRADE ABDULWAHED  OMAR TO THE 6TH/5TH QUARDRIENNIAL DELEGATES CONFERENCE OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIAN NURSES AND MIDWIVES HOLDING AT THE GLORYLAND CULTURAL CENTRE, YENAGOA, BAYELSA STATE ON TUESDAY 20TH NOVEMBR 2012

Protocols,

On behalf of the National Executive Council of the Nigeria Labour Congress and indeed all Nigerian workers, it is my pleasure to be with you this morning given the importance of your union to the Nigerian labour movement and the NLC in particular.

Considering the important functions of members of your union in the health sector, the theme of this conference – National Security and Health Care Transformation: Issues, challenges and the Way forward – it is quite apt, timely and of utmost national interest to the labour movement and to all those who believe our country must make progress, which cannot be possible in periods of insecurity as we currently experience in some parts of the country.

Indeed, the NLC, you will recall held a National Peace Summit and Rally in September this year in Abuja where we brought major stakeholders who we believed could play critical roles in our quests for peace, national cohesion and development. President Goodluck Jonathan, the Sultan of Sokoto, General Yakubu Gowon, Christian leaders, students, unemployed youths, women and the academia were fully present at the event.
Comrades, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen the NLC is a national organization and our belief in the unity of this country is deep and we will always be interested in making imputes to every efforts aimed at advancing the cause of a united, virile and strong Nigeria.

The greatest threat to national security in Nigeria today is not rooted in any religion or ethnic misconceptions or disputes. The elite drum up religious and ethnic disputes as the major cause of insecurity, because they want to avoid taking responsibility as they are the major cause of our national insecurity having misruled the country, and diverted our commonwealth to their private use which has led to the collapse of public infrastructures and industry. Thus, what we now have is a growing army of unemployed men and women, some of whom have taken the option of taking up arms against other citizens to survive.

While other countries are busy developing and implementing policies that are focused on job creation, our leaders have adopted policies that have no national interest but the interest of institutions historically known to have destroyed people through poverty. These institutions, particularly the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have held our country hostage through the imposition of neo-liberal economic policies that have almost ruined our economy.

Today, no industry is running at full capacity because of high cost of production, which is a direct result of the mindless increases in the price of petroleum products since business in Nigeria is generator driven. Not a few industries that could not cope with the harsh business environment have relocated to other countries.

Consequently, Comrades we now have millions of Nigerians who should be in productive employment struggling between life and death without jobs.  Indeed, youth unemployment has grown to an alarming rate of 60% and no country can expect peace and stability with restless youth roaming the streets.   These cannot be the aspirations of the Nigerian people who desire a healthy economy  good governance and a stable political environment.

Since October 1978 when the General Olusegun Obasanjo military government made the first increase in the price of petroleum products to January 2012 when the Jonathan administration made the last increase, the Nigerian people are yet to see the benefits of such increases. Rather than increase our production and build more refineries, we now import petroleum products while our refineries have remained non functional.

The petroleum sector is too important to our national economy to be toyed with. The level of corruption in the industry is so pervasive and has remained unchecked. This is mainly the cause of the problems confronting that sector, and rather than arrest, prosecute and jail those identified by various committees and panels set up by government to have massively enriched themselves with funds meant to service this sector, the government intend to completely hand over the sector to these same people through what they call deregulation. We must not accept this if we are interested in having a country where insecurity will not be a challenge.

Comrades, following the January strike against the last petrol price increase, government promised to use the subsidy they removed to reinvigorate our infrastructures and get our refineries functioning as well as create jobs. As we speak, none of those promises have been fulfilled. Even the buses given to some organizations for public transportation are breaking down one after the other just ten months after they were given out.

One of the achievements of the January strike is the exposure of those who have swindled our people through the diversion of over N1.7trillion meant to subsidize the supply of petroleum products. And months after the reports of the various committees were submitted, none of those indicted have gone through effective prosecution. None have refunded what they stole. Rather, what we see is all sorts of diversionary accusations and counter accusations without prosecution.

If those identified are not prosecuted and what they stole are not refunded, then the objectives of January strike has not been achieved.

Comrades, let me reiterate our opposition to any further price increase and the determination of the Labour Movement to  mobilize all patriotic Nigerians against it . 

What we expect a government who possibly know that past increases has not evidently impacted positively in the lives of our people but deepened their poverty and deprivations and led to the near total collapse of industrial production in the country is to consider reducing the cost of these products.

We encourage all Nigerians to commence and sustain mobilizations against the impending price increase.

We urge you to use the opportunity of this conference to discuss this and come out with a strong commitment to our collective resolve to ensure a new price increase is massively rejected.  Although President Jonathan has recanted himself when he assured Nigerians in his media chat that subsidy will not be removed in 2013, but we must continue to prepare ourselves to take appropriate actions any day the government decides to remove subsidy or increase fuel prices.

Once again, on behalf of Nigerian workers, I wish you a very successful conference.

Thank you for your attention.

The President was represented by the National Treasurer of NLC, Comrade Ayuba Wabba who is also the President of Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria 

Monday 12 November 2012

Nigerian Workers insist Sokoto State Governor must apologise!


                                                                                                 10 November 2012
                                 Press Statement                                          

The Nigeria Labour Congress has been watching in the past few days with keen interest, what has been happening in Sokoto State where a gross human right violation was inflicted on a worker of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN by the state’s number one citizen – the State Governor, Alhaji Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko.

We are reliably informed that lights were taken off in the Governor’s village (possibly while some ceremony was to take place). The next thing was for the governor to summon the officer in charge of PHCN in the area and publicly flogged him to a state of comma.

In reaction to this, the National Union of Electricity Employees, NUEE, had asked the Governor to apologise. Typical of an arrogant Governor, he chosed to keep mute ever since,  resulting in the total black out being experienced in the State for about a week now.

This is absolutely unacceptable in any decent society, and an uncivilized, undemocratic behavior least expected of anyone elected to serve the interests of the entire citizens of the state.
The action of the governor is a violation of the fundamental human rights of the PHCN worker and also exposes the limit of the governor’s exposure to democratic ideals.

The last time we had a case of abuse of office similar to this was when a journalist was brutalized by a serving Military Administrator in River State. This embarrassed an unelected military Government so much that the military Administrator had to be removed from office almost instantly. This is why the Sokoto State House of Assembly must take steps to save the citizens from suffering the consequences of the governor’s hollow understanding of the responsibilities of the Office of Governor.

Since the governor has opted to ignore the union’s modest request for apology and consequently put the whole state in total blackout, it is clear that his intentions were not just to violate the rights of the PHCN worker but also to inflict deeper hardships on the citizenry.

By any standards, what the governor did was not just barbaric, irresponsible but coming from a man of his political standing it also sends a disturbing signal to ordinary citizens who may decide to follow the governor’s example by opting for jungle justice rather than follow legal and constitutional procedures. A governor should behave differently from a tout. A street fighter is not fit enough for any public office in any decent country.

Perhaps the Governor is taking advantage of the immunity clause to remain adamant owing to the fact that he is shielded from litigation as the chief executive of the State, but the state House of Assembly can take steps to call him to order as he has negatively exposed the state’s political leadership to ridicule by exhibiting a personal lack of decency and good manners.

The position of Congress is that the Governor must apologise publicly and he must do this as quickly as possible, otherwise we will unleash series of actions to protect the integrity of not just workers in Sokoto State, but that of the generality of Nigerian workers. 

We will invoke our collective slogan of “An Injury to One Is an Injury to All”.

Congress is therefore putting every worker in both the public and private sectors in Sokoto State on notice by  directing  all unions to commence mobilization towards a solidarity action by the entire workers of the state against this barbaric act by the governor, if he does not accede to the demand of the union to apologise.


Abdulwahed Omar
President



Friday 2 November 2012

Stop Fuel Scarcity NOW


                                                                                                                1 November 2012
                                   Press Statement
The Nigeria Labour Congress observes that for almost two months now, there has been a consistent scarcity of petroleum products in all parts of the country without any cogent explanation from government.

In several fuel stations across the country, prices of petrol in particular are higher than the official pump price without any control by government. The Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR, under the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources is responsible for inspection and control of fuel stations and has not acted in anyway against unilateral price increases by marketers.

For us, this indicates a clear conspiracy on the part of government to force another price hike on Nigerians. This will sure deepen the economic hardships the current official price has unleashed on our people.

The NLC will never accept any further price increase. And we will mobilize workers and their allies against any such increase.
We urge the Federal Government to fulfill its responsibility to the Nigerian people by taking urgent steps to restore normal supplies.

The poverty level in Nigeria has increased and nothing is being done by government to reverse our collective sufferings. The January mass protests and strike will be a child’s play should government hide under the guise of the current scarcity to increase the pump price of petroleum products. It is the responsibility of government to ensure and guarantee the welfare of every citizen.

Should the appropriate agencies of government refuse to enforce compliance with the official pump prices of petroleum products, the NLC will not hesitate to mobilize workers across the country to picket stations selling above the official prices.


Joe Ajaero                                                                    Olusegun Rotimi
Acting President                                                         Acting General Secretary