Chris Ngige, Nigeria's Minister of Labour and Employment, stated this
after a meeting with the labour unions in Abuja, on Tuesday.
The Nigerian Government has fixed January 23 to transfer the executive bill for the new minimum wage to the National Assembly.
This was revealed by Chris Ngige, the Minister of Labour and
Employment, after a meeting with the labour unions in Abuja on Tuesday.
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and other trade unions held a
nationwide protest on Tuesday to demand the implementation of N30,000
minimum wage.
The Nigerian government also signed a Memorandum of Understanding
with the union as a show of readiness on its part to implement the new
wage.
While addressing newsmen, Ngige said: “As for the transmission of the
executive bill to the National Assembly, the government will
religiously implement all the processes that will enable us to transmit
this bill within the stipulated time. We have a target time of January
23, 2018, and we hope that all things being equal, the government will
be able to do so.”
He urged labour unions to shelve all planned protests, stating that government would ensure smooth transmission of the bill.
“We will take all statutory meetings of the Federal Executive
Council, National Economic Council and the National Council of State to
enable us transmit the bill on the new national minimum wage.”
Ayuba Wabba, Chairman of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), who also
addressed journalists after the meeting, maintained that the government
ought to have gone past the present stage in implementing the new
minimum wage, as workers have had to wait for two years.
“After the submission of the report by the tripartite committee that
deliberated on the minimum wage two months ago, it was expected that the
Federal Government would have gone beyond the present stage of making
effort to transmit a bill to NASS," he said.
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