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I’m saddened when FG talk of giving people grains as palliative as if Nigerians are pigeons – Ajaero

 

Joseph Irikefe

 

The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero has described plans by the Federal Government to provide grains as a palliative for the food insecurity plaguing Nigeria as an insult.

Recall that last week Thursday, President Tinubu ordered the immediate release of 102,000 metric tonnes of rice, maize, millet and garri from government reserves and stores of the rice millers to the Nigerian market.

But Ajaero said Nigerians aren’t pigeons or birds.

“I feel sad when we talk of federal government giving people grains as if we are giving grains to pigeons and all these other birds. At this time and age in Nigeria, we are talking of federal government providing how many tonnes of grains to Nigerians as a measure of stemming the level of hunger and poverty in the country. I beg to disagree that that is a serious insult to Nigerians I think that we should think of something else.” He told Arise News on Sunday, February 11 monitored by Advocacy Times.

“If somebody is telling us that it is going to start work today and tomorrow, have they kept the promise? That is the question. Heck no. I think the issue of trust should be paramount in whatever we do as a government and as a people. If we look at the end of every federal executive council meeting you will discover that the federal executive council meeting seems to have transformed into a procurement committee… not directly on policy issues.

“Even when they had agreements with organised labour, with Nigerians, such meetings don’t come out with clear statements on how to implement them, and I am getting worried. So, when Nigerians are hungry, you give them some bags of grains as a solution, that’s not what we need at this point in time.”

The NLC president then spoke on the upcoming minimum wage review, saying that the Labour Union’s demand for minimum wage may increase to a one-million-naira minimum wage may even be viable.

He said; “This one million naira may be relevant if the value of the naira continues to depreciate, and we need to, if the inflation continues to depreciate, if it is not changed. Because the demand of labour is equally dependent on what is happening in the society. You will remember that by the time we are contemplating 200,000, the exchange rate was around 800, 900. As we talk today, the exchange rate is about 1400 or even more. Now those are the issues that determine the demand, and it is equally affecting the cost of living and we have always said it that our demands will be based on cost-of-living index.”

He further said; “Now are we going to get a minimum wage that will not be enough for transportation even for one week? We have to factor in all these issues, and that will determine the Federal Government’s commitment to this demonstration. It is not just that they want to give us minimum wage; the old minimum wage will be expiring by April. And ordinarily, the federal government ought to have set up the community six months before that time so that negotiation would have commenced, but up till now, the Federal Government didn’t do it until they set up, they inaugurated the committee, and the committee has not sat.

“So, it appears we are going to work within one month or two to agree on a figure, and I doubt how those ones are going to, especially when you look at the people that the federal government assembled as members of the committee. They looked at some of the governors that are not even paying the existing minimum wage and even they have a minister of budget who didn’t implement his minimum wage as a governor. Now, if you have the people in the government team on the issue of minimum wage, some of us are not seeing a bright future on the work of this new minimum wage committee.”

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