BREAKING NEWS
Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, on Wednesday,
restated federal government’s stance on the new minimum wage.
He spoke at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, while briefing State
House correspondents after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting presided
over by President Muhammadu Buhari.
The minister said the N24,000 per month stands, a figure the
organised labour has kicked against.
He said that once minimum wage was fixed, any organisation or
state that had the capacity to pay more could do that.
Ngige cited that Edo, Delta and Lagos states paid their workers
more than the current N18, 000 national minimum wage.
He disclosed that FEC approved the implementation of the
no-work, no pay principle when workers go on strike in the federal public
service.
The minister said that the technical committee, which was
inaugurated on April 27, 2016, did their work and submitted to the FEC in Oct.
2017.
“FEC in turn, empanelled a committee of ten which I chaired to
do a government Draft White Paper on those contentious areas that the technical
committee had looked at.
“These contentious areas are enforcement of section 43 of the
Trade Dispute Act Law of the Federation 2004; this is the section that deals
with lockout of workers by their employers without declaring redundancy
appropriately.
“Because in some establishments, especially in the private
sector, workers are locked out by their employers; so the law there says that
if you lock your workers without passing through the normal channel-due
process.
“For the period of the lock out, the worker is assumed to be at
work and will receive all the remunerations and allowances, benefits accruing
to him for the period and that period will also be counted for him as a
pensionable period in the computation of his pension.
“But when workers go on strike, the principle of no-work-no-pay
will also apply because that principle is enshrined in the same section 43 of
the Labour Act,’’ he said.
According to Ngige, the section says that for the period a
worker withdraws his services, government or his employers are not entitled to
pay.
The minister said that under the section, the period for which
the worker was absent would not count as part of his pensionable period in the
public service.
Ngige added that the issue of public servants remaining
permanently in the executive bodies on trade unions was discussed.
His words: “Government realises that some persons in the public
service go into trade union executive positions; hold offices; and they do that
for life; for as long as they are in the service.
“In doing so, they will refuse postings and deployments under
the guise that are doing trade union activities; government says no.
“You have to be a public servant first before you become a trade
unionist; therefore, if you are there; the public service rules will also apply
to you.
“And in furtherance to this, government has also said that there
must tenure stipulations because people stay there without tenure; many
organisations give people union positions without tenure; government says there
is no office that does not have tenure.’’
Ngige said that trade unions, henceforth, should present
constitutions that must have tenures; at least, maximum of two tenures for any
elective position.
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