Connect with us

Nigeria News

‘Unacceptable And Insensitive’ – NLC Fires Tinubu Govt Over Proposed ₦8,000 Cash Palliative

Published

on

at

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has rejected the plan of the Federal Government to distribute ₦8,000 as palliatives to 12 million households in Nigeria to cushion the effects of the removal of fuel subsidy.

Recall that President Tinubu, last week, wrote a letter to the National Assembly seeking approval of an $800 million loan to be disbursed to 12 million households in the portion of ₦8,000 each, designed to cushion the effect of removal of fuel subsidy.

In a statement on Tuessay by its President, Joe Ajaero, the NLC argued that the Federal Government was seeking to impoverish the people further by taking steps that can only be described as robbing the people of Nigeria to pay and feed the rich.

The labour union said rather than reciprocate the goodwill of Nigerian workers, the Federal Government had “insisted on threading the path of dictatorship”.

The statement reads: “The proposal to pay ₦8,000 to each of the so-called 12 million poorest Nigerian households for a period of six months insults our collective intelligence and makes a mockery of our patience and abiding faith in social dialogue which the government may have alluded to albeit pretentiously.

“There is a committee in place between government and labour to work out the modalities. The government cannot set up the committee and go back to do another thing. This is unacceptable.

“If the government does not want to stop these fortuitous actions that it is pursuing in the name of palliatives, we will be forced to constructively review our engagement with the government on this vexatious issue and take matters into our own hands.”

The NLC added that the proposal to pay National Assembly members the sum of N70bn and the judiciary N36bn is insensitive, reckless and brazen diversion of the country’s resources into the pockets of public officers.

It added: “What this means all this while is that the government is seeking ways of robbing the very poor Nigerians so that the rich can become richer.

“There is no other way to explain the proposal to pay a misery sum of ₦8,000 Naira to each of the mysterious poorest 12 million Households for six months which amounts to N48,000 and pays just 469 National Legislators N70b or about N149m each while the Judiciary that has about 72 Appeal Court Judges, 33 National Industrial Court Judges, 75 Federal High Court Judges and 21 Supreme Court Judges and a total of about 201 Judges receive a total of N35b or N174m each.

Ige Olugbenga is a fine-grained journalist. He loves the smell of a good lead and has a penchant for finding out something nobody else knows.