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FG To Parley Organised Labour Over Fuel Price, Electricity Tariff Hike

President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday directed the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Chris Ngige, to meet with the leadership of the organised labour with a view to making government understand their grievances over the recent hike in fuel pump price and the revised electricity tariffs.

While disclosing this to journalists after he met the president, the minister said the meeting was expected to hold tomorrow (Saturday) in Abuja.

He said:“The President has approved for us to have a bigger government side meeting with the organized private labour; all the government institutions that have to do with the finances of government so that we meet with them and show them the books,” he said.

“So, the invitation is going out to them this afternoon, the Nigeria Labour Congress, the trade union congress and their affiliates or supporters and friends in the Civil Society Organisations. The meeting is scheduled for tomorrow, so, I will relate more with the Chief of Staff to the President and the leadership of the unions today so that we do this meeting tomorrow.

“At the meeting, government finances, challenges and everything will be laid bare on the table. Their own fears and what they think is also good for the Nigerian people especially the workers, they will also table it so that we look at it,” the minister added.

Justifying the upward review of the electricity tariff, Ngige pointed out that the hike in electricity tariff was based on the difficulties confronting the sector operators and the need to improve power supply nationwide.

The minister further clarified: “The electricity tariff as you know, the Electricity Regulatory Commission approved the increase based on certain electricity band R1 and R2 and even in the R2 band, you have soft bands so that we can protect the rural poor and people who are in the suburbs.

“So, we are going to look at them holistically because we want a stable labour industrial union in the country so the President has been briefed and he is in tune and has given the support to talk to everybody we need to talk with”, Ngige added.

Making further clairifications on the planned strike by university unions, the minister explained that the had also invited them to a meeting so as to address their concerns.

He said: “The tripartite unions of university system including some colleges of education and some hospitals; Non-Academic Staff of Universities (NASU), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), we have invited them to a meeting, the leadership met with me last week and the major thrust of the challenges they have is on the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information (IPPIS) system.

“They claim and allege that the IPPIS system is over deducting some line items like taxes, the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) taxes they claim the IPPIS system is charging more than they suppose to debit. They also claim that some allowances that are peculiar to the university system like responsibility allowance, hazard allowance, field trip allowance and education of children allowance, that the IPPIS has stopped all of them.

“At the government level, we have discussed and we now want to do a special session with them, they come with their facts and the Accountant General will lead his team, the National Salaries and Incomes and Wages will also come and the Ministry of Labour will lead and then we discuss and find out who is treating the other unfairly”, Ngige added.

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