Category: 📃Supers News

  • Aisha Yesufu calls out Labour for suspending strike

    Aisha Yesufu calls out Labour for suspending strike

    Famous Nigerian activist Aisha Yesufu has strongly criticized the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) for suspending the indefinite nationwide strike.

    The strike was initiated to protest the Federal Government’s rejection of the proposed new minimum wage.

    The organized Labour had commenced the strike on Monday, June 3, effectively shutting down public offices and institutions across the country to voice their dissatisfaction with the government’s stance on the minimum wage issue.

    Aisha Yesufu calls out Labour for suspending strike
    Aisha Yesufu.

    However, following an emergency meeting with government officials, including Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Akume, Labour decided to suspend the strike on Tuesday, June 4.

    In a video clip shared on her verified social media handle, Aisha Yesufu questioned the effectiveness of the strike, stating that it had failed to achieve its objectives.

    She highlighted that despite the disruption caused by the strike, there was no tangible outcome in terms of reaching a satisfactory agreement between Labour and the government on the minimum wage matter.

    Aisha expressed dismay over the suspension, emphasizing that many people had endured hardships due to the strike, with flights missed and travel plans disrupted.

    She further pointed out the inadequate nature of the current minimum wage, arguing that earning as little as N60,000 per month was insufficient to cover basic needs like food and shelter.

    In her words;

    “You have made everybody miss their flights to change everything and people could not travel.

    “At least when you do all of these things, at the end of the day, if something comes out of you, you will know that your sacrifice was not in vain. But when you do this and nothing comes out, what is the essence?

    “People have continued to say that they don’t trust labour and I was even saying they should give the union a chance.

    “You have not even reached a proper agreement so what are you suspending for? A lot of people are suffering. This minimum wage, how can someone be earning like 60k in a month? It is really crazy it’s not as if you are providing the person with food and shelter.

    “They signed an agreement yesterday and there is nothing there. I’m just wondering whether they signed the agreement under duress.”

    See below;

  • 28-year-old nurse goes missing in Abuja

    28-year-old nurse goes missing in Abuja

    28-year-old Nigerian nurse, Lucy Likeh, has been reported missing by her family in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.

    The nurse who is employed at a private organization located at MKK Plaza in Jabi, Abuja, reportedly disappeared on Friday after visiting Zuba Park to send a parcel to a friend in Minna, Niger State.

    Despite the confirmation that her friend in Minna received the parcel, Lucy has not returned home, and her mobile phone has been turned off since the day she went missing.

    Shadrach Obi, Lucy’s brother-in-law, made a public appeal through social media, sharing a missing person notice.

    In his words;

    “My wife’s younger sister who stays with us is missing.

    She’s a nurse and works with a private organization at MKK Plaza in Jabi. She chatted with my wife on Friday evening, mentioning she would go to Zuba Park after work to send a parcel to a friend in Minna. Since then, we have not seen her, and her phone has been switched off.”

    He confirmed that Lucy did reach Zuba and successfully sent the parcel, as verified by the receiver.

    The family has reported her disappearance to the police stations in Utako and Zuba. Obi urged anyone with useful information to contact him at 08035545578 or report to the nearest police station.

    Lucy was reportedly last seen wearing a black tracksuit, a black and white chiffon shirt, and a fez cap.

    Speaking to The Punch on Wednesday, Obi confirmed the ongoing search efforts.

    “She’s my wife’s younger sister, and she hasn’t been found yet. As I speak to you now, I am on my way to the FCT Police Command. I have already reported the incident to the police stations around her workplace and at Zuba, where she said she was going on Friday. However, those efforts have not yielded any results yet. Today, I am going to the command to make a report,” Obi said.

  • ICYMI: Labour Union Calls Off Strike

    ICYMI: Labour Union Calls Off Strike

    The organised labour has announced it’s decision to suspend their one-day old strike in protests of the new minimum wage with immediate effect.

    It would be recalled that the National Labour Congress, NLC and the Trade Union Congress, TUC declared an indefinite strike on Monday June 3rd 2024 after been engrossed in a meeting with the federal government tripartite committee to negotiate the new minimum wage.

    The federal government had put forward the sum of N60,000 which was way off the N494,000 demanded by the Labour union.

    Addressing the press on Tuesday, May 4, NLC chairman Joe Ajaero revealed that after a positive dialogue with the committee  the union is relaxing the strike for one week giving the federal government time to come good on their promises.

    He said:

    “We are ‘relaxing’ the action for one week and not suspending the strike, to give FG the one week grace and test their sincerity.”

  • Customs intercept N96m marijuana along Lagos Bar Beach

    Customs intercept N96m marijuana along Lagos Bar Beach

    The Nigeria Customs Service, Western Marine Command on Tuesday, handed over 17 sacks of Cannabis Sativa, containing 1, 257 parcels worth N96m, intercepted along Bar Beach in Lagos State, to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency.

    Speaking during the handover at the command  in Apapa, Lagos, the Customs Area Controller of the command, Paul Bamisaiye, said that the officers of the command, in a bid to purge the Western waterways of smuggling activities, intercepted the hard drugs weighing 609kg.

    He stated that a patrol team at the Bar Beach station received credible intelligence on the movement of a boat on the high sea carrying suspected contraband items.

    Bamisaiye added that upon receiving the information, the team moved towards the described location and intercepted a fibre boat fitted with a 200Horse Power Yamaha engine, carrying the suspected items.

    “In a related development on May 19, 2024, officers and men of the command, while on routine patrol along Panko Creek, Badagry waterways, intercepted a wooden boat fitted with a 25HP Yamaha engine carrying suspected contraband items,” he said.

    The WMC boss stated that the smugglers, upon sighting the patrol boats, abandoned their boat and dived into the water.

    “A careful examination of the items revealed 505 bags of foreign parboiled rice and the means of conveyance, with a combined duty paid value of N59.2m,” he added.

    He stated that the actions of those smugglers directly contravene sections 245 and 254 of the Nigeria Customs Service Act 2023.

    He appealed to the general public and traders not to engage in illicit drugs and to shun smuggling, which leads to economic sabotage, as drugs continue to be a menace to society and a source of other criminal acts such as banditry, kidnapping, and armed robbery.

    While receiving the substances, the Assistant Commander of Narcotics, NDLEA Marine Command, Maggaji Bashiru, commended the customs command for intercepting the hard drugs, noting that it proved the increased synergy among sister agencies.

    He mentioned that while security agencies were planning strategic approaches to enforce arrests, smugglers were also re-strategising.

    Bashiru said the items would be taken to the NDLEA command for a thorough investigation.

     

     

     

  • Naira may settle at 1450/$ by Dec, says Fitch Ratings

    Naira may settle at 1450/$ by Dec, says Fitch Ratings

    International credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, has projected that the Nigerian currency, the naira, will end the year at 1,450 to the United States of American dollar.

    This was disclosed by the Director, Sovereigns, at Fitch Ratings, Gaimin Nonyane, during a post-sovereign rating webinar on Tuesday focused on Nigeria and Egypt.

    Earlier in May, Fitch Ratings revised the Outlook on Nigeria’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating to Positive from Stable, and affirmed the IDR at ‘B-’, on the back of reforms in the foreign exchange market, oil industry and monetary policy over the past one year.

    Speaking on the fate of the Naira which has struggled since its floating in June 2023, Nonyane said, “The Naira is still finding its feet. It is still in price discovery mode. So we would expect a lot of volatility in the near term. However, as I just mentioned, there is the expectation of multilateral donor funding coming in Q3 this year in addition to improved oil receipts. So that should help to reduce volatility somewhat by Q3 this year.

    “We project that will average about 1200/dollar this year and end the year round 1450/dollar. And in terms of next year, we see a gradual depreciation but it also depends largely on the foreign exchange reforms momentum. So, this is our baseline scenario on the basis that the momentum continues at the current pace.”

    On the likelihood of Nigeria being upgraded further, Nonyane said “Currently, we see a path to a sustainable recovery in CBN foreign exchange position. And sustained current account surpluses. Currently, the current account surplus is low, below one per cent of the GDP, although they are experiencing some surpluses, it is still not significant in addition to that, if we see a sustained reduction in inflation and greater stability in the foreign exchange markets, and one key factor is the tax revenue. We need to see stronger mobilisation of domestic non-oil revenue. So all of these combined collectively, it’s not one or the other, which could potentially lead to an upgrade.

    “Low tax revenue base has contributed to the government’s very high interest-to-revenue ratio which currently stands at 38 per cent and that is quite high. This is about four times more of the B rating median and forms a key rating consideration.”

    Fitch Ratings, however, projected recovery in the oil sector.

    “However, we do expect a recovery in the oil sector to support the current account over the short term. We also expect the oil refining capacity to increase over the short term as the Dangote plant ramps up capacity. We expect the PMS to come on stream later this year or early next year and this would help to reduce transport costs and lower refined oil imports which should help to ease foreign exchange demands,” the director at Fitch Ratings said.

    Delving into the foreign reserves of Nigeria, Nonyane said that the gross foreign exchange reserves have fallen from its peak in March at about $34bn and it is currently standing around $32.7bn with recent gains from oil receipts eroded by repayment of existing debt obligations as the Central Bank of Nigeria repaid draw down on foreign exchange swaps and foreign exchange sales to Bureau De Change to support the Naira.

    “In terms of the outlook, we project foreign exchange reserves to rise modestly by year-end and this would be as a result of a recovery in oil receipts, multilateral funding and potentially commercial borrowing. This would equate to about 4.2 months of current external payments which is still in line with our B-medium but following the CBN’s recent publication of its financial statement, we still estimate that more than 30 per cent of the gross reserves are from bank swaps, this highlights an external risk.  Although we do expect the majority of the swaps to continue to be rolled over, providing space to navigate some challenges in external debt servicing.

    “External debt servicing is expected to rise by about $4.8bn in 2024 and a further $5.2bn in 2025 and this includes amortisation and the $1.1bn Eurobond which would be due in November 2025. So sustaining the foreign exchange momentum is key,” she concluded.

    On multilateral funding, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, while appearing on Sunday Politics, a programme on Channels Television, mentioned the expected funding coming from the World Bank in a matter of weeks.

    “In two weeks, the board of the World Bank will consider a $2.25bn package for Nigeria, of like virtually free or almost grant funding, very low interest in funding. It is not being given on conditionalities. A large part of it,$1.5bn is what they call Development Policy Operation. Essentially, it is in recognition of what has been done to stabilise the Nigerian economy and get it back on the growth path and the funding will come virtually immediately. At least, half of it will come virtually immediately after that board meeting. That’s what we are looking forward to.

    “That is why we are confident we will achieve and it just shows that we know how to use the multilateral development banks to our advantage. We don’t agree with everything they say. We don’t have to agree but they agree with our homegrown policies for trying to get Nigeria moving again,” he said.

     

     

     

  • Report — 30 govs spent N968.64bn on refreshments, others in three months

    Report — 30 govs spent N968.64bn on refreshments, others in three months

    No fewer than 30 state governments of the federation spent N986.64bn on recurrent expenditures, including refreshments, sitting allowances, travelling, utilities, etc., in the first three months of 2024, The PUNCH reports.

    The states’ budget implementation reports, which were obtained from Open Nigerian States, a website supported by BudgIT that acts as a repository for public budget data, were analysed.

    For the first three quarters of the year, our correspondent examined budget implementation data from thirty states; data for six states was not available.

    Benue, Imo, Niger, Rivers, Sokoto and Yobe States were the ones without Q 1, 2024 data.

    A breakdown showed that the 30-state government spent N5.1bn on refreshments for guests, N4.67bn on sitting allowances to government officials, N34.63bn on local and foreign travel expenses, and N5.64bn on utility bills, amounting to N50.02bn in the first three months of 2024.

    The general utilities include electricity, internet, telephone charges, water rates, and sewerage charges, among others.

    The sub-nationals also paid N405.77bn as salaries to their workers.

    Other recurrent spending items covered in the report included the amount spent on foreign and domestic travel, Internet access fees, entertainment, foodstuff, honorarium/sitting allowance, wardrobe allowances, telephone bills, electricity charges, stationery, anniversaries/special days, welfare, aircraft maintenance, and more.

    In the first three months of 2024, Abia State spent N10.92bn on its recurrent expenditures, including N165.38m on refreshments and feeding, N39.26m on utilities, N214.57m on sitting allowances, N127.1m on local and foreign travels, among miscellaneous expenses.

    During this period, Adamawa State expended N23.7bn on recurrent expenditures with N287.61m spent on refreshments and feeding, N109.62m on utilities, N79.57m on sitting allowances, N768.77m on local and foreign travels.

    For Akwa Ibom State, recurrent expenditure gulped N46.85bn, which included N4.46m on refreshments and feeding, N223.32m on utilities, N6m on sitting allowances, N214.61m on local and foreign travel.

    Anambra State disbursed N9.91bn for recurring expenses with N78.18m on refreshments and feeding, N32.52m on utilities, N42.09m on sitting allowances, N188.39m on local and foreign travel.

    Also, recurrent expenditures cost Bauchi State Government N35.75bn with N397.58m going to utilities, N50.8m on refreshments, N287.11m on allowances, and N413.56m on trips.

    Bayelsa State spent N35.1bn on recurrent expenditures, comprising N28.4m on utilities, N156.14m on refreshments and N279.99m on trips.

    Similarly, Lagos State disbursed N189.62bn for recurrent expenditures, including N1.21m for refreshments, N383.12m for utilities, sitting allowances costing N52.79m and N633.37m on travels.

    Borno spent N18.79bn, Cross Rivers (N17.44bn), Delta (N68.68bn), Ebonyi (N14.95bn), Edo (N32.32bn), Ekiti (N32.8bn), Enugu (N7.51bn) and Gombe with N20.89bn.

    Within the same period, Jigawa State spent N15.52bn on the recurrent expenditures, Kaduna expended N34.69bn, Kano (N34.41bn), Katsina (N21.87bn), Kebbi (N11.67bn), Kogi (N37.4bn), Kwara (N24.34bn), Nasarawa (N18.61bn), Ogun (N47.12bn), Ondo (N31.12bn), Osun (N24.39bn), Oyo (N40.12bn), Plateau (N24.70bn),  Zamfara (N13.46bn), and Taraba (N20.93bn).

    Government spending has come under increased scrutiny in recent times, particularly in light of the country’s worsening economic challenges.

    At different fora, financial experts have also raised concerns about states’ spending on recurrent expenditure, highlighting the need to embrace financial innovations.

    A development economist, Aliyu Ilias, said many states had yet to fully develop themselves as industrialised and marketable to attract investors.

    Ilias urged governors to develop an area of strength they could leverage to attract foreign investments.

    He said, “Going forward, what they could do is identify one area of strength. For instance, Bayelsa has oil and should be able to attract investments. I think it is about policy. They should give the policy a chance that would allow people to come and invest. They should also create an attraction and develop an economic summit that will make sure they showcase and attract investors.”

    An economist and former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Uyo, Prof. Akpan Ekpo, urged the states to increase their revenue by improving service delivery.

    On his part, a Professor of Economics at Babcock University, Segun Ajibola, stated that the enduring problem of high governance expenses had persisted at the state level, with inadequate oversight and accountability resulting in minimal economic benefits for grassroots citizens.

    The former president of the Chartered Institute of Bankers lamented that state assemblies had also abandoned their oversight duties, leaving the state governors to operate with no iota of transparency and accountability.

    He said, “The first issue is the perennial complaint about the high cost of governance in Nigeria and at all levels. When you look at these issues, attention is often concentrated on the Federal Government, so the searchlight is always more on the central government. Most often, nobody cares about what is happening in the states and local government, and that is where the problem is.

    “There are so many institutional frameworks in place to look at what is happening at the federal level but who cares about the states? The cost of governance in relative terms is even much higher in states than the federal and that is why you hardly feel the impact of governance in most states.

    “Only a few states can boost a significant presence in the lives of their people in our states. The state assemblies are expected to conduct oversight functions on the activities of the executives in their respective states, but in reality, how many states are doing that, leaving the executives to be all in all in incurring high costs.”

  • Labour considers N100,000 as Tinubu issues ultimatum

    Labour considers N100,000 as Tinubu issues ultimatum

    Organised Labour may settle for N100,000 minimum wage as the Tripartite Committee on National Minimum Wage commences daily meetings for five days to reach a consensus.

    Multiple sources in the labour movement told The PUNCH on Tuesday that the union leaders were willing to review their demand from N494,000 to N100,000, following the criticism and controversy that trailed their proposal which was considered outrageous and unrealistic.

    In a statement by his media aide, Rabiu Ibrahim on Saturday, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, said the proposed minimum wage would result in an annual expenditure of N9.5tn, a burden he described as untenable for the nation’s finances.

    Despite the intervention of the leadership of the National Assembly, labour embarked on an indefinite strike on Monday, a development that grounded economic activities nationwide.

    Banks, airports, public schools and courts were shut, forcing the Federal Government to convene an emergency meeting to find a way out of the impasse.

    In a bid to move the negotiation forward, the unions on Tuesday announced the suspension of the industrial action for five days after President Bola Tinubu agreed to pay a national minimum wage higher than N60,000 and the tripartite committee pledged its readiness to convene daily until a new minimum wage is announced.

    To show his commitment to the negotiation, the President on Tuesday directed the Minister of Finance, Wale Edun, to present the cost implications for a new minimum wage within two days.

    Tinubu gave the order at a meeting with the government negotiation team led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Akume, at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    Speaking with The PUNCH in confidence because Labour had not formally presented its final offer to the tripartite committee, a senior NLC official confirmed that the unions would insist on N100,000 minimum wage.

    Agenda setting

    He stated, “Today’s (Tuesday) meeting was essentially to set an agenda and plan how to complete the assignment within the five days.

    “The government representatives did not mention a raise in the N60, 000.  They just set the agenda on what to do and how to go about the negotiation. There was no mention of any increment. But labour planned to close the negotiation on N100,000 minimum wage.’’

    The Deputy Head of NLC Political Commission, Prof. Theophilus Ndubuaku, also confirmed that the Tuesday tripartite meeting on minimum wage was to draw an agenda for the daily meetings.

    “We met today (Tuesday) to draw up an agenda for the one-week daily meeting. We met today and drew the agenda because the agreement was that we meet daily for the meet one week and on our own, we said we are relaxing the strike not even suspending it.

    “It’s more like putting everybody on red alert. It means we are not going to give any notice. Which means by this time next week, we are going on strike. There is a difference between relax and suspend. Relax is to stay on your duty post and put your hands on the trigger. It is tomorrow (today) that we are expecting the government to submit another proposal,’’ he explained.

    The organised labour vowed to reject any little addition to the N60,000 offer by the tripartite committee on the new minimum wage.

    The President of the Trade Union Congress, Festus Osifo, made this known on Channels Television’s Politics Today programme on Tuesday.

    TUC warns

    When asked whether labour would accept a few thousand naira additions to the offer, the TUC boss said,  “No, we also told them that it’s not that we’d get to the table and you start adding N1, N2, N3,000 as you were doing and we got some good guarantees here and there that they would do something good.”

    Osifo added that labour was not fixated on N494,000 as the new minimum wage for workers in the country but the tripartite committee must show seriousness and offer workers something economically realistic in tandem with current inflationary pressures.

    Though the union leader refused to mention a specific amount, he said the new minimum wage must be equal in purchasing power to the value of N30,000 in 2019 and N18,000 in 2014.

    But disclosing to journalists the presidential directive to the finance minister, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, said Tinubu during the meeting directed Edun to provide the financial implications of the new minimum wage in 48 hours.

    He noted, “The President has just summoned a meeting of all those who negotiated on behalf of the Federal Government led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation. The minister of finance was there, the minister of budget planning, the minister of information, the minister of budget and national planning, the minister of labour, and the NNPCL GMD.

    “We were all there to look at all issues and the President has directed the minister of finance to do the numbers and get back to him between today and tomorrow so that we can have figures ready for negotiation with labour.”

    Presidential directive

    Idris assured of the President’s readiness to accept the committee’s resolutions, adding that “The President is determined to go with what the committee has said and he’s also looking at the welfare of Nigerians.

    “The government is not against or opponent of labour discussions; the government is not an opponent of wage increase but what is there is that government is always there to ensure that there is a balance between what government pronouncement is and what the realities are on the ground.

    “And therefore, we will work assiduously to ensure that whatever promises the government makes are promises that will be kept. That is the idea of this meeting.”

    Furthermore, he said President Tinubu had directed the government representatives to work collectively with the organised private sector and the sub-nationals to achieve a new affordable wage award for Nigerians.

    Idris explained, “The President has given a marching order that all those who have negotiated on behalf of the Federal Government and all those who are representatives of organised private sectors, the sub-nationals to come together to have a new wage that is affordable, sustainable and that is also realistic for Nigerians.

    “The wage is not just that of the Federal Government as I mentioned earlier, the sub-nationals are involved, the organised private sector is involved; it was labour that stepped out during that procedure. Now we have come back to the negotiation table.”

    The minister assured that all hands would be on deck to present a new minimum wage for Nigerians in one week.

    “All of us will work together assiduously within the next one week to ensure that we have a new wage for Nigeria that is acceptable, sustainable and also realistic,” Idris said.

    Meanwhile, Labour said it had “relaxed” its strike for one week to enable fruitful negotiations with the Federal Government on minimum wage.

    The NLC and TUC announced this in a communique on Tuesday, after a joint National Executive Council meeting.

    The suspension of the strike followed a six-hour meeting between the leadership of organised labour and the National Assembly in Abuja on Monday night.

    The Federal Government had expressed the commitment of President Bola Tinubu to raising the N60,000 offered as the minimum wage.

    The agreement stated, “The President of Nigeria, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, is committed to establishing a National Minimum Wage higher than N60,000; and the Tripartite Committee will convene daily for the next week to finalise an agreeable National Minimum Wage.”

    The organised labour also agreed to “immediately hold meetings of its organs to consider this new offer, and no worker would face victimisation as a consequence of participating in the industrial action.”

    The resolutions were signed on behalf of the Federal Government by the information, Idris, and the Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Nkeiruka Onyejeocha.

    In its statement announcing the strike suspension, the unions said there was a greater need to create the right ambience for negotiation to continue unhindered.

    “The indefinite nationwide strike action is, therefore, relaxed for one week from today (Tuesday) to allow the Federal Government to commit to a concrete and acceptable National Minimum Wage; take definitive steps to reverse the electricity tariff hike back to N66/kwh and abolish the discriminatory classification of electricity consumers into bands,” the unions said.

    Labour also mandated its affiliate unions and state councils, to return to their respective workplaces immediately

    On the issue of the electricity tariff, the unions said they were deeply disappointed by the government’s silence and lack of concrete action regarding the reversal of the electricity tariff hike and the abolition of the apartheid classification of electricity consumers into Bands.

    “The NEC reaffirms that these issues are critical to alleviating the financial burden on Nigerian workers and the general populace. The electricity tariff hike and discriminatory Band classification remain unacceptable and must be addressed alongside the wage increase.”

    In their position on the minimum wage, opposition lawmakers in the House of Representatives called on the Federal Government to implement a new minimum wage of more than N100,000 to assuage organised labour.

    Speaking with The PUNCH on Tuesday, the Minority Leader of the House, Kingsley Chinda, lamented the condition of the average Nigerian worker, stressing that the failure to pay a living wage is a constitutional breach.

    He said, “In Nigeria today, any wage below $200 (N298,800) is ridiculous. The Nigerian worker is heavily underpaid and it is the responsibility of the government to ensure the security and welfare of its citizens. Failure to pay a living wage is unconstitutional as the welfare of citizens is neglected.

    “Public and government officers should have their monthly wages while we consider the hourly rate for private or casual employees. The earlier the government concludes this matter with labour unions, the better.”

    Like Chinda, a member of the Peoples Democratic Party and the lawmaker representing Obokun/Oriade Federal Constituency, Osun State, Oluwole Oke, also made a case for the payment of a living wage which he said would enable the majority of Nigerians to cope, given the current economic realities.

    “The minimum wage the Federal Government should pay should be N120,000. I say this because wage increase has its linkages, effects and consequences. Nigerian workers deserve living wages,’’ he argued.

    Not unaware of the challenges his proposal would attract, Oluwole who chairs the House Committee on Judiciary, urged the private sector to be taken into consideration.

    “We need to look at productivity in the private sector. Would the private sector that feeds the government survive? We have a serious issue at hand,” he added.

    Asked what is good enough to count as a living wage, the lawmaker representing Abuja Municipal/Bwari Federal Constituency of the Federal Capital Territory, Chinedu Obika said, “N150,000 based on the current reality.”

    Obika, a member of the Labour Party, further urged the Federal Government to consider the inflation rate in the past few years, when negotiating the new minimum wage for the workers.

    In a bid to resolve the impasse on the minimum wage, the Senator representing Abia North District, Orji Kalu, has proposed a new minimum wage of N90,000.

    Speaking during a brief plenary session on Tuesday, Kalu said a new wage in the region of N90,000 may be enough for workers to return to their duty posts.

    Following a motion moved by the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Labour and Employment, Diket Plang, Kalu urged the Senate to prevail on both parties to reach an agreement in the interest of the nation.

    While calling for an end to the standoff,  Kalu described the complete shutdown of the power grid by the labour unions as a “daring move” which should not have happened.

    He said, “Sixty thousand might sound very good but let the entire Senate see how we can persuade both labour and the Federal Government to agree between N75,000 and N90,000

    “If you go by N90,000, it means in the last five years in which this law (N30,000) was made, it means if you divide 200 per cent of N90,000 by 5, it will give you 40 per cent. The food inflation,  purchasing parity and other things you have in the market are around 32 per cent to 33 per cent. So,  labour should be very happy with what we are doing.

    “Let us send a Senate delegation to the Federal Government and Labour with the proposal of N90,000 and all the parties should agree to that.”

    The lawmaker expressed dismay over the shutting down of the nation’s power grid by the unions as part of their demands for improved wages.

    “Pulling down the national grid is not an easy job and it might take up to three to four days for it to come up. Shutting down and starting a national grid is a problem.

    “The Federal Government and the Labour should be cautioned to agree. Though, it’s going to be difficult for the private sector to pay, they must manage,” he said.

    On his part, Senator Ali Ndume urged the Senate to collaborate with the executive arm to sponsor a bill on a new wage. to address the situation.

    Also speaking, former Senate President, Ahmad Lawan urged his colleagues to be mindful of the value of the naira, noting that a new minimum wage may not have much impact on the standard of living of Nigerians.

    He insisted that emphasis should be paid on strengthening the value of the naira adding that the new minimum wage will be useless if the naira continues to depreciate.

    “If it is N200 to a dollar, the impact will be more on the entire Nigerians, both the employed and the non employed”, Lawan stated.

    In his remarks, the President of the Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio said though it was heartwarming that the strike had been suspended, the conduct of the unionists, he said, deserved condemnation.

    “One of such excesses was the shutdown of the national grid which is more of an economic sabotage than agitation for a new minimum wage.

    “Also, disruption or prevention of students from writing their West African School Certificate Examination by some labour unionists during the strike was bad because the examination is not organised by Nigeria but by West African Countries,” he said.

    He also condemned the disruption of Hajj flights by the unionists, saying such a development must not occur again.

    Weighing in on the matter, a former deputy governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Kingsley Moghalu, noted that Nigeria’s level of productivity cannot support the N494,000 minimum wage organised labour is demanding.

    Moghalu disclosed this on his official X handle on Tuesday.

    Moghalu said the demand is deserving but not realistic and therefore recommended a minimum wage of N75,000 to N100,000.

    “In the debates on the national wage in Nigeria, we miss the fundamental point: there is little or no productivity in the economy,” he said.

    “If we had a truly productive economy, there is no reason we can’t have the kind of minimum wage of N400k or N500K that Labour wants. But we can’t, because the level of productivity in the economy cannot support it. Remember, the minimum wage is not just about government salaries.

    “There are not more than 2 million, at most 3m civil servants in Nigeria. It is even more about what is paid in the private sector to household staff, etc.

    “All of this is why, all things considered, including avoiding a minimum wage that multiplies already ravaging inflation (assuming such a wage can even be paid), I recommend a minimum wage of between N75,000 and N100,000.”

    He further explained that productivity can be achieved by human capital development and electricity, amongst others.

    “In fact, speaking about productivity, how productive is an average Nigerian worker? How skilled is he or she, and thus how much value does he or she create?

    “I know we are all upset at our insensitive political class, who do not care about the masses and only for themselves. But the economics of it all is far more complex.

    “Sadly, it is quite obvious that the political will to reduce the waste in governance does not exist.

    “Human capital development, skills that create value addition, which is economically quantifiable. Wealth creation and profitability increase. Wages go up naturally and of course, the almighty electricity,’’ he stated.

     

  • Little girl cries out over endless errands as a last born child

    Little girl cries out over endless errands as a last born child

    A little girl in a viral video bemoans the pain of being the last born of the house as she cries out over unending errands from her parents and siblings.

    In the video, the little girl expressed her frustration, stating that her parents, brother, and sister constantly send her on errands, and she can’t take it anymore.

    Little girl cries out over endless errands as a last born child

    She acknowledged that being the youngest is tough and prayed not to return as a last-born child in her next life.

    Check out some reactions from netizens

    Big Mayor said: “If you see billing wey first born dey chest, you go focus on the plate you dey wash”

    Edo-wizard stated: “This small last born don’t know why life is like this 🤷🤣🤣🤣🤣Just to wash plate and errands, justice for part born I agree 🤣🤣”

    Teekay said: “My sister ohh 😂”

    CEJ.web3 said: “Ein never see anything, na errand dey bother am”

    JustWisdom stated: “As a last born mgba gi akanti ee 🫵you drop that phone”

    Shuga wrote: “This one never see anything”

    karash wrote: “I see shege growing up. My sister show me shege. Dey still treat me like a 16 years old”

    Abazz said: “So me wey wash plate,sweep floor,mop ceiling,why I no complain?? Make she go work joor”

  • Man looking malnourished cries out for help over hunger

    Man looking malnourished cries out for help over hunger

    A Nigerian man who appeared severely malnourished has made a heartfelt plea for help, expressing his desperate struggle with hunger.

    In a video he shared on the internet, the man with no shirt on asserted that he has nothing to eat and is seriously hungry at the moment.

    Nigerian man looking malnourished cries out for help over hunger

    Despite his apparent situation, many viewers expressed skepticism, questioning how he managed to afford a data subscription to make and share the video himself.

    Reactions trailing the video…

    Damilare Sabram said: “Tatoo, fine hair cut, data, and smartphone. Kin tewo, nteeee💀”

    Uzane wrote: “even if na toothpaste go lick my bro”

    Ogbeni Olabode wrote: “Una sure say nor be filter be this thing”

    Mazi Ikanako wrote: “Good.. And you still get money buy data. Energy take dey browse. Strength take make video. Time to read and make tweet …..If Hunger no kill you there, make I naked baff. Rubbish!! with that Photoshop image.😅😂😂”

    Charlexcasa said: “I doubt if is hunger that did this to him. It must be what he has been smoking without eating well enough.”

    RICHIE noted: “This isn’t malnutrition, result gotten from illicit drug consumption.”

    Precious observed: “This is filter his forehead looks fresh and his tattoo is standing out from his skin”

    WATCH VIDEO: 

  • Lady finds biblical evidence proving all men are liars

    Lady finds biblical evidence proving all men are liars

    An African lady claims to have found evidence in the Bible to prove that all men are liars, as she shares verses which read “All men are liars” and “Every man is a liar” in the holy book.

    This is contained in a post made available on her page on a popular social media platform.

    African lady finds biblical evidence proving all men are liars
    African lady finds biblical evidence proving all men are liars.

    In the said post, which has attracted millions of likes and thousands of shares and comments, the lady boasted of finding the evidence people have been looking for.

    After boasting that she had found the evidence to prove that all men are liars in the holy book, she shared the verses where the statements can be found.

    She wrote: “I found the evidence y’all been looking for: Psalms 116:11 and Romans 3:4.”

    As she made the statement, her post went viral on social media, with thousands of people storming the comment page of the post to share their thoughts.

    See some reactions below:

    Diana Monie: “which book is this😀😀 I want to preach on Sunday in women’s conference.”

    Morgs’: “I think he was talking about mankind as a whole.”

    Jahnelia🤍: “If the Bible said it who am I😭😭😭to no believe it.”

    r6ta ☆🎀💋✝️🫧: “yall gon take everything out of context 😭😭.”

    layiah! 🎀: “IN GOD WE TRUST. now lemme get a amen.”

    A R T I N: “so the comments don’t get it means man as humans in whole.”

    Azumy🏳️‍🌈: “verse I need the verse I have to prove someone somewhere.”

    Judith55: “so eve was accused of wat she did noy do. dat story of adam and eve still no clear for me.”

    _beyonceee_: “guys we know it means us as humans, and mankind. The videos just for comedic relief😭.”

    slit: “bro I’m pretty sure it means every human is a liar if they do not see trust in god.”

    theresaaa: “I think we have to read a little more to understand the word.”

    WATCH VIDEO:

    @ryherbnagi

    i found the evidence you’all been looking for 😅 psalms 116:11 and Romans 3:4

    ♬ original sound – DJBobSanto