The Senate, on Thursday, considered a bill seeking to stop employers in the private and public sectors from engaging employable Nigerian graduates as casual workers.
The
Prohibition of Casualisation Bill 2020 was sponsored by Senator Ayo Akinyelure.
Akinyelure
said casualisation of Nigerian graduates in the Nigerian labour market had
become a subject of great concern.
He said more
workers continued to groan under this immoral strategy of cutting cost by
employers rendering them inferior to their counterpart in other countries of
the world.
He said,
“Statistics from the Nigeria Labour Congress shows that many workers in the
telecommunications, oil and gas sectors are engaged as casual labourers by
employers of labours.
“Other
sectors with thousands of casual labourers include mining, steel, banking and
insurance.”
Akinyelure
while citing the banking industry as a hub for casualisation, blamed banks for
turning female marketers into harlots and sexual slaves in a desperate attempt
by them to keep their jobs and meet unrealistic deposit targets.
He said, ‘In
the banking and insurance industry, for instance, many young graduates
particularly females are employed as marketers and given unrealistic customer
deposit targets running into millions.
“They are
hired and fired at will when such unrealistic targets are not met.
“The female among them who are desperate in
keeping their jobs turn to harlotry and sex slavery.
“They, move
from one office to the other looking for invisible customers who have large
funds to enable them meet their targets.
“It is high
time this evil and devilish act is stopped.”
Senator
Biodun Olujimi said, “Our girls have been turned into what we cannot imagine.
“Most of them
have been asked to look for funds, and when they come to us, I always tell
them, I do not even have the funds to eat; how can I have funds to keep with
you in the bank?
“They will
never be promoted if they don’t bring in such funds, and this is a banking
industry that is privately owned, yes, but has made so much profit, and from
the profit they could at least take the few that they can manage properly,
rather than take a lot that they will be giving pittance.”
The lawmaker
harped on the need to have a legal framework to ensure that casualisation did
not exist.
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