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Labour dispute: NLC vows to proceed on warning strike in Kaduna vanguardngr.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vanguardngr.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, Kaduna State Council, has called on all workers in the state to disregard the government’s circular against the five days warning strike slated to begin this Monday.
A statement by the State Secretary of the council, Comrade Christiana John Bawa, lamented that no any employer of the state government under the present leadership of Governor Nasir Elrufai has job security or is safe from disengagement.
She recalled that in April 2021, Kaduna State Government sacked over four thousand workers without following due process.
She also recalled that the state government under the leadership of governor Nasir El-Rufai sacked over thirty thousand workers in 2016 and up till date, their entitlements have not been settled.
Daily Post Nigeria
Published
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Kaduna State Council has said it will ground government activities from May 16 as a warning strike over the sack of civil servants by the state government.
The Chairman of the council, Mr Ayuba Suleiman made this known in a statement on Monday in Kaduna, NAN reports.
“NLC Kaduna council has resolved to ground all activities for five days as proposed by the National Headquarters to serve as a warning strike for the sacking of over 4000 workers in the state.
“Total withdrawal of services will begin on Sunday, May 16, by 12:00a.m,” the statement said.
Views: Visits 6 NLC President, Comrade Ayuba Waba and others …Buhari backs workers over pay …Sanwo-Olu promises 395,000 jobs By Our Reporters Organised Labour yesterday, directed workers in the states where governors were yet to implement the new minimum wage to immediately begin an indefinite strike. This came as the Federal Government said state governors had no choice but to pay the N30,000 national minimum wage, warning that any governor not paying was breaching the nation’s law. The unions also sought for general upward salary review for workers, even as it lamented the seemly intractable socio-economic and political predicaments that had enveloped the nation.