Friday, 3 February 2017

Workers’ salaries: NLC to tackle Benue, Rivers government

Workers’ salaries: NLC to tackle Benue, Rivers government  


Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) will soon tackle state owning workers’ salaries, NLC president, Ayuba Wabba has said.
Wabba said Rivers and Benue states have been listed as priority states in the union will take on for not paying workers and pensioners.
Wabba gave the hint during a meeting with Representatives of primary health care workers from Rivers, who were on solidarity visit at the weekend.
Let’s not be under any illusion that any employer will give you your rights on a platter of gold,
because there are competing demands,” he said.
Rivers and Benue are among priority states the NLC will tackle for not paying workers and pensioners, insisting worker pay and resulting spending power could help lift the country out of recession.

“Payment of salaries is not about resources; it is about priorities and we are not getting it right,” Wabba said of defaulting states.
“For any system to get out of recession, citizens must have resources to buy and sell and pull the economy out of recession,” he noted.
Speaking about continued neglect of worker demands, Wabba said, “Most of our workers are treated as slaves. Employment is a contract. We work, and it is difficult for [employers] to meet the terms of bargain.”
Wabba also told the rivers state health workers who also used the meeting as a fence mending mission said, “Unity and sanctity of our movement is protected”, insisting it would strengthen workers’ bargaining power.”
At the fence mending meeting which was held in Abuja, the workers also agreed to withdraw the case instituted against the leadership of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC).
Both sides will today appear before the National Industrial Court to announce they have resolved to settle out of court.
Rivers state NLC chairperson, Mrs Beeatrice Itubo announced at the meeting that Rivers health workers have agreed to withdraw their matter in court and pursue the part of peace.
She added, “We will walk to court and tell the world that health workers ate civilised people and can resolve issues among themselves.
“Only then we can resolve and see their issues sorted out in the state,” Beatrice Itubo, who chairs NLC in Rivers and was former state chairperson of MHWUN in Rivers when the contention started three years ago.

“When you are speaking as a body, undivided, I think government will hear what you are saying,” she said, explaining outcome expected after both sides resolved to settle internal differences.”
More than 3000 workers in primary health, under the aegis of MHWUN, were left out of harmonised health salary scale across the 23 local government areas of Rivers after council authorities failed to implement the scale for them.
Medical and Health Workers Union of Nigeria (MHWUN), President Joe Biobelemoye said “We have wasted two years speech making.”
Officials say no two local government health workers are paid similarly, and computation of pay and benefits are at the unilateral discretion of council authorities.




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