The Senate yesterday resolved to interface between the Federal Government and the Nigeria Labour Congress to avert the impending strike over the subsidy removal and its attendant negative consequences on Nigerians.
The Senate resolved a motion titled: “Urgent need to avert intending strike of the Nigeria Labour Congress”, by Senator Kawu Suleiman AbdulRahman (NNPP Kano South) during plenary.
Kawu noted that the NLC had given the federal government a seven-day ultimatum to reverse what the union termed as “anti-poor policies” or face an indefinite nationwide strike from Wednesday, August 2.
He also noted that the union had directed all its affiliates and State Councils to immediately begin mobilisation of workers and other Nigerians, including the civil society allies for a long-lasting strike and protests.
The lawmaker stated that “the labour movement in a statement signed by its national president accused the federal government of failing to meet up with the demands presented to it following the subsidy removal on petrol, which caused an astronomical rise in the pump price of the commodity.”
He expressed worries that “the strike would cripple the country as movement would be severely curtailed as transport operators would withdraw their services, while markets, schools, and healthcare facilities would be forced to shut down.”
The lawmaker stated that “the labour movement in a statement signed by its national president accused the federal government of failing to meet up with the demands presented to it following the subsidy removal on petrol, which caused an astronomical rise in the pump price of the commodity.”
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He expressed worries that “the strike would cripple the country as movement would be severely curtailed as transport operators would withdraw their services, while markets, schools, and healthcare facilities would be forced to shut down.”
“The NLC strike also has a bad reputation for the Nigerian economy and the educational system because it portrays the country in a bad light to the external world and discourages foreigners from coming to do business or study in Nigeria.
“The society, always bears the brunt of strikes, like the saying that an idle hand is the devil’s workshop, increase in crime rate, social vices like armed robbery, oil bunkering, prostitution, cyber scams, etc,” he warned.
In his remarks, the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio said that the federal government was not relenting in its efforts to alleviate the sufferings of the masses following the subsidy removal on petrol, calling on the local and state governments to always play complementary roles.
Calling for the understanding and support of Nigerians for the present administration, he declared that “98 per cent of our monthly revenue cannot be used to pay subsidy