Mrs Nkiruka Onyejeocha who is Minister of Labour in Nigeria has claimed that the Federal Government has achieved about 90% of the agreement it had with the Organised Labour last October.
Speaking on Channels Television’s Politics Today which was monitored by Africa Today News, New York on Tuesday, Onyejeocha said; “We’ve done virtually everything in agreement. 90% of everything.”
According to her, the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (TUC), Joe Ajaero, had actually informed government representatives at a meeting on Sunday that the protest was not about the government’s commitment to the October agreement but food inflation.
The minister stated that two of President Bola Tinubu’s administration’s top priorities were economic growth and food security.
She pleaded for Nigerians to have patience with the new government, saying that it is still early in the planting season and would soon reap the benefits..
Onyejeocha said the Federal Government had ticked about 90% of the 15-point memorandum of understanding it signed with the Organised Labour on October 2, 2023.
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Some of the agreement include granting wage award of N35,000 to workers, inauguration of minimum wage committee, and suspension of the collection of Value Added Tax (VAT) on Diesel for six.
On the provision of high capacity CNG buses for mass transit in Nigeria, the minister said funds had been released for the purpose but “there are certain things you cannot control; you cannot control the number of days a shipment or a container will stay in the port”.
Nigeria is battling rising inflation, food inflation, forex crisis, economic hardship and high cost of living occasioned by the removal of petrol subsidy, attracting protests in parts of the country.
The Presidency had engaged labour leaders in a last-minute talks on Monday night but the meeting ended in a stalemate as the NLC insisted that the protest was going to hold.
Though the Trade Union Congress (TUC) said it was not part of the strike, the NLC grounded economic activities across the country on Tuesday, with labour leader Ajaero, saying that the protest was about hunger and not just a clamour for a review of the minimum wage.
Labour later suspend the protest on Tuesday night, after day one of the demonstration, saying the objectives of the two-day protest had been achieved on the first day of the rally.