- A group has expressed concern over the delay in the declaration of the new national minimum wage figure
- The back and forth on the negotiation between the federal government and the NLC has angered the Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights (CDWR), which urged labour (NLC, TUC) to declare a nationwide strike
- At the moment, President Bola Tinubu's government is pushing for N62,000 as the minimum wage while the organised labour insisted on N250,000 as pay for Nigerian workers
Legit.ng journalist Esther Odili has over two years of experience covering political parties and movements.
Following the delay in President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's led federal government's announcement of a new national minimum wage, the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) have been told to proceed with a nationwide strike.
Group tells labour to embark on strike immediately
The Campaign for Democratic and Workers’ Rights (CDWR) made this call to the NLC leadership, which is headed by Joe Ajero.
The group urged organised labour on Monday, July 1, to immediately mobilise and declare a nationwide strike over the minimum wage and the recent hike in electricity tariff.
Tinubu told actual amount to pay workers
According to CDWR, NLC, and TUC, as the next step in the minimum wage struggle, should declare and mobilise widely for a 48-hour general strike and mass protest to demand a minimum wage not less than N200, 000 and the reversal of all anti-poor policies (privatization, deregulation, subsidy removal, electricity tariff hike etc).
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In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Chinedu Bosah, CDWR recalled that NLC and TUC had been at loggerheads with the government and private sector over a new minimum wage, and negotiation has been deadlocked for over three weeks and still counting, saying Government and Private Sector insistence on paying N60, 000 provoked the declaration of an indefinite strike which started on June 3rd 2024 but was suspended on the 4th of June, 2024.
The group contended that:
“The mass protest of mostly young people has just forced the Ruto-led government in Kenya to withdraw the IMF/World Bank-inspired tax increment policy. This example shows that it is also possible for Nigerian working people and youth to force the Tinubu-led government to reverse the prices of petroleum products, electricity tariffs, fee hikes in public schools, and all other neo-liberal capitalist policies, policies which would give some immediate respite to most Nigerians.
“CDWR calls on the leadership of NLC and TUC, as the next step in the minimum wage struggle, to declare and this time mobilise widely for a 48-hour general strike and mass protest to demand a minimum wage not less than N200, 000 and the reversal of all anti-poor policies (privatization, deregulation, subsidy removal, electricity tariff hike etc).
“However, given the recent failures of the NLC and TUC to seriously mobilise trade unionists and activists must themselves take steps to organise a campaign at grass roots level to both build support for the struggle and for the trade unions to have leaders who take their responsibilities seriously.
“Amongst the immediate demands should be the call for the inclusion of a demand that the minimum wage must be automatically adjusted in line with the rate of inflation and rising cost of living, minimum wage need not wait for four or five years before adjustment.”
This may forestall needless long negotiations and ensure wages do not fall behind the inflationary rate and poverty line. However, we should add that it will require a serious struggle to force the capitalist elite to agree to this and actually implement it as they will try to take back any concessions they have been forced to make.”
Source: Legit.ng