Wednesday, 8 June 2016
Mass sack: FG threatens to withdraw licence of GSM operators
Bimbola Oyesola
Federal Government in Geneva threatened to
withdraw operating license of banks or telecom
operators who violated its order to put on hold
the current mass sack in the two sectors.
Speaking at the on-going 105th Session of the
International Labour Congress (ILC), in
Geneva, Switzerland, Minister of Labour and
Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, said the
government would go a step further, on erring
companies, if the banks and the
telecommunication outfits continue with the
mass sack of the workers.
It could be recalled that the banking sector
has in recent time embarked on massive
retrenchment as a response to the current
economic hardship with Ecobank Nigeria, last
week sack of over 1,040 of its
employees, Diamond Bank sacked over 200 of
its workforce, while FBN Holdings, the parent
company of First Bank of Nigeria Limited,
recently said it would prune the number of its
employees by 1,000.
The minister, who addressed journalists
immediately after his speech to the ILO
National Assembly, said: “We will go a step
further if they continue. We know what to do.
After all, the banks have the licenses giving
by the government. We know what to do. They
need to comply. They need to come to the
negotiation table.
“We did that in the oil industry and we
succeeded. Even if you are going to lay off,
there is a way to declare redundancy, there is
a process. Section 20 of the Labour Act says
it. You must call the unions and discuss with
them. You don’t just treat them as slaves in
their own country and you want us to keep
quiet.
“We want them to maintain the status quo. As
far as I am the minister of labour, I will
protect the interest of workers; same to the
telecommunication companies, they are also
talking about compiling lists without discussing
with anybody.”
On the position of the Nigeria Employers
Consultative Association (NECA) that the
companies in the private sector has the sole
power to hire and fire and that the power
doesn’t resides in the government, Senator
Ngige said the organised private sector,
represented by NECA is protecting its own
members, and merely expressing their opinion.
The minister warned that as much as the
employers have the right, but cannot be done
at the detriment of the Nigerian workers and
the law of the land.
He said: “The organised private sector, NECA
is protecting their own interest. They are a
leg of the tripod, nothing stops them from
having their own opinion. They are the section
that protect private investors. They are
employers’ body and the people I am talking to
are also employers.
“The bank’s boards, the banks chairmen, the
bank’s managing directors, are the people I am
talking to. I also talk to unions whenever the
need be. In the same order, I also asked the
unions not to picket the banks. They had
mobilised to picket the banks. It is the job of
the government to maintain a peaceful milieu
on both sides and that is why I issued the
directive.
Source: Sun news.
“From investigation and preliminary report
available to us, the banks, the insurance
companies, the financial institutions are all
laying off. And in some cases, they do not
allow their workers to unionize and that is
wrong and against the ILO principle.”
He emphasised that they have not entered into
collective bargaining agreement (CBA) which is
the first step to take to lay off workers.
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