The Secretary General of the National Union of Textile Garment and
Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN), Comrade Issa Aremu, has decried
the non-payment of workers’ salaries by 22 state governments in the
country, saying the development is unacceptable.
In a statement he issued in Kaduna on Thursday, Aremu, who is also
the vice president of the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, described the
development as a wage theft, wage robbery and economic crime.
The NLC vice president noted that the same governors, who had failed
to pay workers their salaries for more than three months, were able to
come up with funds to pay their delegates during the just concluded
party primary elections across the states.
He, therefore, urged governors of the affected states to devise the
same means they used to source for funds to pay delegates, to settle the
workers’ salaries without further delay.
He said: “We see that delay in payment of salaries as wage theft,
wage robbery. It is actually an economic crime because Nigeria Labour
law says thou shall pay the worker as and when due. In fact by 22nd of
every month you must have paid the workers fully.
“We never heard of any delegate being owed a single penny during the
primary elections, but they cannot get money to pay the workers. In
fact, some of the delegates even bought new cars and properties after
the primaries because the money they got in just few days is much more
than what workers earn in many months”.
Comrade Aremu further noted that it was time for the Federal
Government to review upward the national minimum wage in order to
reflect with emerging economic challenges and also warned against any
attempt by government to further impoverish the Nigerian workers with
reduction in pay or loss of jobs on account of the recently announced
austerity measure by the Federal government.
He also pointed out that the $65 per barrel of crude oil as captured
in the 2015 budget confirmed that Nigeria is an oil dependent economy
contrary to the claim by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating
Minister for the Economy, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala that the budget is
projected on a non-oil revenue basis.
Instead, the labour leader believed that sustainable budgets were the
ones based on revenue arising from real sector of the economy such
as domestic manufacturing and exportation of finished goods.
Mr Aremu said that the National Assembly, while debating the budget
proposal, should put policies that will grow the real sectors of the
economy and also ensure that the Central Bank of Nigeria lowers the
interest rate and stop the free fall of the Naira which will undermine
purchasing power of working class Nigerians.
He also asked the National Assembly to make sure the budget captured
practical measures on reducing cost of governance, which must begin with
drastic reduction of pay and allowances of the Executive and
Legislature.
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