N30, 000 minimum: Labour threatens to boycott 2019 general elections

Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Monday threatened to boycott the 2019 general elections should the Nigerian government fail to activate a new minimum wage.
Nigeria’s current minimum wage is N18,000 approved in 2008 by late President Umar Musa Yar’Aruda’s administration.
NLC Assistant Secretary in charge of Information, Denja Yakub, who spoke on Nigeria Info FM, Lagos programme ‘Morning Crossfire’, said labour had been patient with government enough.
“No minimum wage, no vote from Nigerian workers.”
While the NLC has planned a nationwide protest for Tuesday, January 7, Yakub said the attitude of the governors was unbecoming and that they must be held accountable.
He said the government were not committed to increasing minimum wage “because we don’t owe them accountable, they feel they have the ability to manipulate people’s intelligence.”
While lamenting displeasure at the unresolved negotiations, Yakub said it was disheartening that the tripartite committee that proposed the N30,000 minimum wage consists of NLC members, the federal government, state governors and the private sector.
“Government actively participated. What was collectively agreed upon was 30,000. We didn’t have anything less than 30,000 and that is what has been taken to the president (Buhari) to be enacted into law.”
“We didn’t impose a figure, we negotiated the figure and it was proposed with all members of the committee as provided by law. They cant bend the rules,” Yakub said.
“Whatever politics the government and governors, especially Yari, who can’t even manage his state has been going up and down playing politics with the minimum wage – you can’t play politics with minimum wage,” Yakub said.