The organised labour Thursday asked
President Muhammadu Buhari to send to the National Assembly, without any
delay, a bill fixing N30,000 as national minimum wage or risk
resumption of hostility.
“We expect the matter to be properly
concluded, and for the bill to be sent to the National Assembly. We
expect that to happen within a couple of weeks. And if it becomes
protracted we will take the appropriate decision,” General Secretary of
the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr. Peter Essom.
The labour union top official spoke in
reaction to the presidency’s insistence yesterday that the president had
not approved any figure as the national minimum wage despite the
recommendation of the National Minimum Wage Committee, which proposed
N30,000.
The presidency in a statement by
Buhari’s media aide, Mr. Femi Adesina, had corroborated Minister of
Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed’s, position on Tuesday that
the president was still considering the committee’s recommendation and
would make his opinion known in due course.
Adesina said reports that the president
had reneged on his earlier acceptance of N30,000 minimum wage as
recommended by the committee had been of concern to the presidency and
described as unnecessary, the brewing controversy over the wage
proposal, explaining that until the report and recommendation of the
committee were reviewed by the executive and legislative process on the
new minimum wage concluded, nobody could attribute any claim to the
president.
He said the president would follow due
process on the new minimum wage, insisting that the current controversy
amounted to putting the cart before the horse.
He also accused members of the
opposition of playing politics with the minimum wage, threatening that
judgment awaited them at the forthcoming polls.
“The presidency is concerned over
recurring reports alleging that President Muhammadu Buhari has reneged
on earlier acceptance of the N30,000 recommended as the new National
Minimum Wage by the National Minimum Wage Tripartite Committee,” he
said, adding, “These reports are contrary to what transpired on Tuesday
when the committee presented its report to the president. Responding,
President Buhari, while acknowledging the concerns raised by government
on affordability and labour’s focus on meaningful increase, stated
clearly in a speech, which was made available to the media: ‘In a way,
both arguments are valid. I want to assure you all that we will
immediately put in place the necessary machinery that will close out
these open areas.
‘Our plan is to transmit an Executive
Bill to the National Assembly for passage within the shortest possible
time. I am fully committed to having a new National Minimum Wage Act in
the very near future.
‘As the executive arm commences its
review of your submission, we will continue to engage you all in closing
any open areas presented in this report. I, therefore, would like to
ask for your patience and understanding in the coming weeks.’
“From the above, and throughout the
report-submission ceremony, the president never mentioned any figure.
What he committed himself to was a new minimum wage, and only after the
report of the committee has been reviewed by the executive and
legislative processes of government and an appropriate bill presented to
him for assent.
“Until the proposed minimum wage has
gone through the whole gamut of law-making, President Buhari, who is a
stickler for due process, will not be caught in this unnecessary web of
controversy, which amounts to putting the cart before the horse and
hair-splitting.”
But labour in a swift response yesterday
warned that it would not accept any form of delays, stating that it
certainly would not allow reopening of negotiation over the figure
already fixed.
Essom told THISDAY that there were no
more elaborate reviews or processes to be done other than for Buhari to
send the draft bill prepared by the committee to the National Assembly
for immediate legislative approval.
He disagreed that N30,000 was labour’s
demand, explaining that was a compromise figure among the federal
government, organised private sector and labour, contending that there
was no basis for a review of the committee’s recommendation.
“It is the figure that was submitted by
the tripartite committee, he (the president) himself set up. So we need
to be factual from the beginning,” Essom said, adding, “As far as we are
concerned, we will recall that Labour’s demand was N66,500 and that the
N30,000 was the outcome of tripartite negotiations. If the government
on their own want to jettison that and start renegotiating a new figure,
whatever the industrial consequences that follows, they will be held
responsible. We stand by the figure that was recommended by the
committee and no manipulation of that is going to be accepted by us.”
On what labour would do if government
insisted on lowering the figure, Essom said: “I think what we will say
is that at the appropriate time you will hear from us.”
Essom said labour would insist on the sanctity of the agreement at the tripartite negotiations, which settled for N30, 000.
Labour had threatened a nationwide
strike to begin last Tuesday, if the government failed to endorse the
N30,000 as new minimum wage.
Court Directs Submission of Terms of Settlement
Meanwhile, Justice Sanusi Kado of Abuja
Division of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN) has ordered
both the federal government and labour to submit before the court a
report of their resolutions on the dispute over minimum wage.
The order given was sequel to a request
for adjournment by counsel to the federal government to allow time for
parties to reach amicable resolution of the dispute and present their
agreement before the court, adding that negotiations by parties were
still ongoing.
The federal government had dragged
organised labour before the court over its planned strike, if government
failed to accede to its demand of N30,000 as the new minimum wage in
the country.
The federal government had also in an
ex-parte motion prayed the court to stop labour from embarking on the
strike pending the hearing and determination of the substantive suit.
Delivering ruling on the ex-parte,
Justice Kado, said he granted the ex-parte order stopping the strike
which the labour had planned to commence on November 6, in the interest
of the people.
He, in addition, ordered the federal government to put organised labour on notice and adjourned hearing to November 8, 2019.
The strike was, however, averted after
an agreement was reached on November 5 between labour and the federal
government with N30, 000 recommended to President Muhammadu Buhari as
the new minimum wage regime.
When the matter came up yesterday, the
three defendants – the Nigeria Labour Congress, the Trade Union Congress
and the Nigerian Governors’ Forum were absent and were also not
represented by any lawyer.
However, the federal government and the
Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami, were
represented by their legal team led by Emmanuel Omonowa.
Omonowa informed the judge that based on
the order made by the court on November 2, negotiations on the new
minimum wage were ongoing.
He, therefore, pleaded with the court to
give more time to the parties in the suit to enable them to continue
with the negotiations and later give a report on the negotiation efforts
to the court.
“Pursuant to Order 42(1) of the National
Industrial Court Rules, the court should allow parties to see the
possibility of amicable settlement of the matter,” Omonowa said.
Justice Kado, while granting the request
for adjournment however reaffirmed his November 2 order restraining
organised labour from embarking on the planned strike and warned all the
parties to the suit against taking any step to cause disruptions in the
case.
He subsequently adjourned till January
30, 2019, for the parties to report to the court on whether or not they
had settled amicably or would still be interested in going on with the
case.
Justice Kado had on November 2, in a
ruling on an ex parte application moved on behalf of the federal
government by the Solicitor-General of the Federation and Permanent
Secretary, Federal Ministry of Justice, Mr. Dayo Apata, stopped the
labour from embarking on their planned strike scheduled to commence on
November 6.
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