Minister of Labour and
Employment Sen. Chris Ngige, made the appeal on Tuesday in Abuja at a meeting
he held with the leadership of PENGASSAN, NUPENG and the International Oil
Companies.
The Federal Government has
appealed to major oil marketers operating in the country not to retrench
workers in the oil and gas sector.
He said that the meeting
was fallout of Monday’s meeting held to address the concern raised by PENGASSAN
and NUPENG on the declaration of redundancy by the major oil marketers.
PENGASSAN had threatened to
embark on a nationwide strike beginning from July 7 over some issues, including
the alleged mass sacking of its members by various oil and gas companies.
Ngige urged the IOCs not to
declare redundancy as the last resort if there was economic downturn in the
country, saying that it should be declared in the proper manner.
He said: “Government will
not say you should not declare redundancy; redundancy will always come if the
economy is not doing well.
“That is why it is in the
Labour Laws of every country; but what we are against is when this particular
law is applied strictly as it is enshrined in the labour laws.
“Companies sometimes carry
out redundancy immediately without discussion or without even informing the
workers, this is very wrong.
“The redundancy law as
stated in Section 20 of the Act defines redundancy as when you cannot carry on
with the number of staff you have due to circumstances beyond your control.
“You must discuss with the
workers or the workers representatives directly and you must show them why the
situation is like that.
“This may include showing
them the books of the company, explaining to them that the company is not doing
well and then you all agree on the difference.”
The minister explained that
the labour law stated that redundancy should not be embarked on due to personal
dislike.
He urged the companies to
adhere to the rules and regulations when dealing with the issue of redundancy
if such issue was already in the purview of the ministry.
He noted that labour laws
were meant to protect the employees and iron out issues affecting both parties
before things are damaged.
“There are other ways of
preventing redundancy -that is by looking at the expatriate quota; you know
what it costs keeping one expatriate in this country, so you can find a way of
reducing them.
“Another way is that you
can also look at the peaks of offices in the managerial and the management
section and you can come down on it.
“These are some of the
various ways we can use to maintain equilibrium in the employment of labour
market in any country.
“When you push people into
the labour market, they will join the army of unemployed persons and can
constitute security nuisance to us,” he said.
The minister said other
issues being discussed at the meeting include unjust labour practices by the
oil companies, cases of rustication of job and positions due to union
activities , among others.
PENGASSAN President Mr
Johnson Olabode assured that if the issues affecting the unions could be
concluded in the meeting, its National Executive Council would call an
emergency meeting to call of its strike.
“I want to assure that if
this meeting is properly concluded, we will do the needful,” he said, and
commended the minister for his commitment to amicably resolve the issues
affecting the sector.
(NAN)
if bisness no move no bi fg go tell dem to sack or not
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