Take a fresh look at your lifestyle.

FG Plots To Proscribe Nigeria Labour Congress —Wabba

0 345

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress [NLC], Comrade Ayuba Wabba has raised alarm over perceived efforts by the federal government to proscribe the labour organisation.

Comrade Wabba told the Committee on Application of Standard that the government has forwarded a new bill to the National Assembly which is meant to distort the nation’s industrial relations landscape.

Wabba said this in the company of a representative of workers on the Governing Board of the International Labour Organisation [ILO].

NLC reported the Nigerian government to ILO, accusing the government of working through the back door to undermine collective labour relations in the country.

The NLC also reported the Kaduna and Kogi state governments to the World Labour body over total disregard for the principle of collective bargaining.

This constitutes violations of ILO convention 98 for sacking workers indiscriminately and refusal to pay salary of workers.

Wabba addressed the Committee which meets to review industrial relations in member countries.

He said that part of the bill sent to the nation’s parliament seeks to proscribe the NLC if it fails to amend its constitution to conform to the bill two years after being passed into law.

According to The Nation, he said: “A new version of the Collective Labour Relations Bill is not a product of consultation and largely different from the one we have made inputs to some years ago.

“Strangely, this new version was to be surreptitiously passed into law, but for our vigilance and the candor of the parliament to undertake due diligence.

“Evidence of our claim that the intentions of the amendment were to undermine trade unions and unnecessarily distort our industrial relations landscape and temperature can be seen in one of the portions of this new bill which says “if after two years of commencement of the application of this Act, and the Nigeria Labour Congress has not amended her constitution to conform to this Act, it shall stand proscribed”.

He said further that “the mention of the name of our organisation in a draft proposal for amendment betrayed the undisguised malicious intention of the amendment.”

The NLC President maintained that “interference in collective negotiation process in the private sector has been a cause of worry to the Committee since 2009.

“The government continues to claim that sectorial collective bargaining agreement must have its blessing before it becomes implementable so that there is no “undue economic disruption” and so it has benchmarks for wages.

“This clearly contradict Article 4 of this Convention for which the Committee has sharply pointed in this report being discussed by this Conference Committee.

“The Collective Labour Relations Bill the Committee of Experts refers to started over 10 year ago. Still, no end in sight.

“Aside the process being very slow and delayed, the intention of government with respect to the review and amendments are giving us cause for concerns.

“As against the advice of the Committee of experts to bring labour laws in conformity with the Convention, we can report that, sadly, this is not the case at present.

“Rather, the government is seeking to use the process to weaken and destroy trade unions and at the same time claiming to expand “freedom of association and volunteerism”.

He also said “few days ago, another infraction to this convention was committed by the Ministry of Labour.

“The Minister was reported in some national dailies as saying that workers should not expect the National Minimum (still under discussion) to be finalised by September.

SEE ALSO:

https://news.band/index.php/news/new-minimum-wage-nlc-flays-ngige-double-standard/

“When the minimum wage negotiation started, it was agreed by all partners that it will terminate with an outcome in September.

“The Minister is thus unilaterally determining the negotiation outcome.

“We ask that this Committee call on the Nigerian government to allow for genuine and good faith engineering of the intended reforms of the labour laws so as to bring them in conformity to the provisions of this convention.

“We also pray this Committee to ensure that the Nigerian government work genuinely with the H

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.