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Tinubu Government, Trade Union Congress Agree To Resolve Labour Issues In Two Weeks

Tinubu Government, Trade Union Congress Agree To Resolve Labour Issues In Two Weeks
September 5, 2023

Minister of Labour and Employment, Solomon Lalong, disclosed this in Abuja at the end of a meeting with the leadership of the TUC, led by its President, Comrade Festus Osifo.

 

The Nigerian Government and Trade Union Congress (TUC) have agreed that the former should be given two weeks to address some of the grievances of the Congress.

 

Minister of Labour and Employment, Solomon Lalong, disclosed this in Abuja at the end of a meeting with the leadership of the TUC, led by its President, Comrade Festus Osifo.

 

The meeting was convened by the minister to resolve TUC’s and Nigeria Labour Congress’ differences with President Bola Tinubu’s government and to avert the pending warning strike by organised labour, Olajide Oshundun, Director of Press and Public Relations, said in a statement on Tuesday.

 

According to Lalong, the issues for which a two-week timeline was set for their resolution include wage awards for federal civil servants to cushion the effect of rising poverty among them, and tax exemption for a certain level of workers, both in the public and private sectors.

 

The other issues on the two-week timeline are to put structures in place to ensure effective implementation of the palliatives declared by the Federal Government for the states and the FCT, and to set out the modalities for accessing the N70 billion proposed for the funding of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME), among others.

 

The minister declared that after the two weeks, the meeting would reconvene for further discussions, and added that the parties understood that some of the issues were urgent, while some would require a long span of time to resolve.

 

According to Lalong, the parties also agreed that there would be no strike within this peace period of two weeks “while we are doing deliberations and also working towards realising some of these objectives.”

 

 

The President of the TUC, Comrade Osifo, was quoted as saying that the two-week timeline was reasonable, as it would give the government ample time to address the issues.

 

He reportedly disclosed that at the commencement of the meeting, the leadership of TUC was pushing for a one-week timeline for the resolution of issues in dispute, but had to reconsider after weighing the government’s constraints, stating, “We also need to be pragmatic.”

 

Osifo reportedly stated that their demands, as contained in a communique earlier issued by the Congress, include resolving the impasse between the Lagos State Government and Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria (RTEAN), increasing the amount provided for palliative as the sum of N5 billion allocated per state is inadequate to ameliorate the sufferings of Nigerians.

 

Earlier, in a press conference, the minister had implored the Nigeria Labour Congress to suspend its planned two-day warning strike scheduled for the 5th and 6th of September, as such action would be detrimental to the gains already recorded by the government in securing a greater future for Nigerian workers and citizens.

 

He urged the leadership of NLC to give the government some time to address the issues raised holistically.

 

The minister reassured Nigerian workers that the government would never take them for granted nor fail to appreciate their support and understanding.