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Minimum Wage: No deal as Tinubu, Labour meet in Aso Rock

* To meet again next week 

* No negotiation, status quo remains  — Ajaero

By Chesa Chesa 

Hopes were dashed on Thursday as the meeting between President Bola Tinubu and the organized labour on Thursday at the Aso Rock Villa over the new minimum wage was adjourned to next week with no final amount arrived at.

The meeting lasted about one hour, which the organized labour team led by the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Joe Ajaero and the President of the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Comrade Festus Osifo.

The Tripartite Committee on the new national minimum wage had recently submitted two figures to the President as the organized private sector and the government team offered to pay N62,000, while the organized labour demanded N250,000.

Speaking to State House correspondents afterwards, Osifo said that the organized labour put all the economic indices on the table and how it was biting on Nigerians.

“In the meeting we tried to put the issues on the table. Issues that are bordering and biting Nigerians today, the economic difficulties and the value of naira, how it has also eroded, how these have affected the prices of commodities and goods in the market. 

“So, we tried to put these before Mr President because he is the President of the country and the buck stops at his table.  

“We have had all the conversations with all his agents, but today (Thursday) we said let us meet with the father of the country and have this conversation and make the argument that Labour always make.

“We made all the arguments, the economic analysis, macro, micro, fiscal and monetary issues. so we put everything forward and at the end, the President made his remark as the President and we all agreed let’s go back to internalize it, have some conversations and by one week time, we will come back and we will continue the meeting”, he said.

Ajaero however, said that there was nothing like negotiation at the meeting rather a discussion on the current economic realities in the country.

According to him: “In real sense, it wasn’t a negotiation but a discussion and we have had that discussion. We agreed to look at the real terms probably and reconvene in the next one week. 

“So that’s where we are because we didn’t go down there to talk naira and kobo. At least there were some basic issues that we agreed on.”

Asked whether the organized labour insisted on the N250,000 demand at the meeting, the NLC President said “we didn’t go into naria and kobo discussion. Now the status quo in terms of the amount N250,000 and N62,000 remains until we finish this conversation.”

Minister of Labour and Employment, Nkeiruka Onyejeocha said that the meeting which she described as fruitful was between father and children, stating that “we are hopeful that very soon everything will be resolved. 

“Of course, when father and children talk you know what it is? That’s just exactly what has happened. It took us almost about an hour. I believe that it’s all for good.”

Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, expressed optimism that there would be a positive result after next week’s meeting.

He said: “Recall that already there is 62,000 naira that has been put out there from the government side and the organized private sector but the organized labour is still not accepting that but we know that they will come to the table, we know that this is something that is going to be workable for Nigerians. 

“The organized labour and the government will reach an agreement. We have adjourned now for a week. The labor union has asked the government allows them to At least a week to discuss further and we have allowed them. We’re going to reconvene in the next one week and we hope and we believe by the end of day, we’ll have something that is good for all Nigerians. 

“We do hope that by the time we come together again next week, we’ll have something that we can put out for Nigerians to see and to agree with.”

Meanwhile, a source privy to the deliberations at the meeting said that the President urged the organized labour to consider the N62,000 offer the federal government and the organized private sector made, even as he explained what led to the subsidy removal.

“President Tinubu suggested that instead of waiting for five years to review the minimum wage, we can continue to dialogue and see the possibility of reviewing it every two years.

“He also said that the Organized Labour should consider the N62,000 offer because itis double of the N30,000 we were paying”, the source said.

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