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  • News - North Central - FCT
  • Updated: May 21, 2021

FG Meets With NLC, Kaduna Government, Sets Up 10-Man Committee For Further Dialogue

FG Meets With NLC, Kaduna Government, Sets Up 10-Man Committ

Photo from the reconciliation meeting between Kaduna State and the NLC, organized by the FG

The Federal Government on Thursday convened a conciliatory meeting with the Kaduna State Government and the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to resolve the impasses that have grounded activities in the state.

The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, presided over the meeting. The National Chairman of the NLC, Ayuba Wabba, led other labor leaders to the discussion.

On the other hand, the Kaduna State Commissioner of Local Government Affairs, Jaafaru Sabi, represented the State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, and the state government.

At the deliberation at the end of the meeting, Ngige told journalists that the state government delegation disagreed with the labor leaders.

He noted that the meeting, therefore, resolved to constitute a 10-man committee comprising six state government officials and three NLC representatives to discuss and resolve the impasses.

The minister stated that the committee chaired by the Kaduna State Head of Service was given a mandate up to Tuesday next week to report to him.

According to Ngige, the meeting agreed that no person shall be victimized for participating in the industrial action in Kaduna State after which both parties appended their signature to the document.

Giving his opening remarks shortly after the meeting began, Ngige had said that the Federal Government was very concerned about developments in Kaduna due to insecurity.

He decried that the situation was further compounded by the strike, which was already crippling economic activities in the state, noting that this informed the intervention of the Federal Government.

The minister believes the labor issues could have been avoided and all parties to the negotiation are products of the Nigerian Constitution, hence the need to work together for the well-being of the people.

He stressed the importance of dialogue and the need for restraint in trying to enforce one’s rights, after which he laid the ground rules for the discussions and appealed to the parties to give peace a chance while negotiations continued.

Ngige had, however, warned that he would not hesitate to invoke relevant sections of the Trade Dispute Act and escalate the situation to the National Industrial Court if the intervention efforts fail.

In his remarks, Jaafaru stated that the state government was very displeased and condemned the actions of the NLC in its attempt to shut down the state.

He outlined some of the efforts of the state government to promote the welfare of civil servants, including the implementation of the N30,000 minimum wage.

The commissioner disclosed that the state government had employed 25,000 primary school teachers and 1,700 science teachers in secondary schools, besides other employment processes that were already in the advanced stage.

According to him, the public service consumes four out of every five nairas the state has while salaries and allowances take a huge chunk of revenue allocations to the local governments.

Wabba, on his part, thanked the Federal Government for its intervention, saying the issue that brought the parties to the meeting was because of the state government’s policy to downsize its workforce.

He explained that the crux of the issue was the payment of emoluments to affected staff during redundancy, stressing that this was never done.

The NLC president stressed that the state government never engaged with the workers before disengaging them, insisting that the right thing was never done.

He accused the state government of ignoring the series of letters sent to it requesting that the workers should be engaged before being disengaged from service.

The decision to protest and to go on strike, according to him, is the last resort and labor never went to any office to disrupt any service during the protest in Kaduna.

Wabba informed the meeting that all that the labor wanted was transparency in the process of disengaging the workers.

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