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The Organised Labour is set for a collision course with the Federal Government following threats by Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, that government will activate the “no-work- no pay’’ rule clause in case workers embark on strike over the new minimum wage.
President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Mr Ayuba Wabba, in a statement on Thursday in Abuja said the threat if implementedwould be a negation of workers’ right of association.
Wabba’s reaction followed the Federal Executive Council’s approval on Wednesday to apply the `no work, no pay’ principle during strike.
According to Wabba, the right to strike is a human and trade union right and cannot be wished away by any government policy.
“That’s why strike is legalised by our laws and has been exercised since colonial era to date.
“The right to strike is what differentiates a worker from a slave; just like the right to strike, right to picketing, right to work, to rule, right to protest and peaceful assembly.
“So, the issue of no-work-no-pay has always existed. It is morally and legally wrong to apply a phrase in a body of law without respecting all other provisions of the same law.
“Same law provides that a worker’s wage is due after 30 days; where this and or any collective bargaining agreement is violated, it is legally and morally justifiable for unions and workers to apply “no-pay-no-work,’’ he said.
The NLC president said the threat of no-work-no-pay would not deter workers and trade unions from exercising the right to strike.
Wabba stressed that there were clear procedures provided by law on how workers can embark on a strike, saying “once this legal requirement is met, no- work- no-pay rule cannot apply.”
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the Federal Executive Council (FEC) had approved the implementation of the no-work, no-pay principle when workers go on strike in the federal public service. (NAN)