Pensioners in the South West have pleaded with Nigerian Labour Congress to begin another round of minimum wage negotiation with the federal government.
This is as the pensioners on Thursday rejected the N70,000 minimum wage newly signed into law by President Bola Tinubu following a recent increase in the price of premium motor spirit also known as petrol.
The pensioners, under the aegis of Nigeria Union of Pensioners, Southwest Zone, in a communique at the end of their zonal meeting held in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, called on labour to renew demand for N250,000 minimum wage because of the current economic realities.
NUP Southwest Publicity Secretary, Dr Olusegun Abatan, who read the communique to journalists, also demanded that implementation of local government autonomy should not disrupt the payment of pensions of council pensioners/retired primary school teachers and salaries of local government workers/primary school teachers.
Speaking on the minimum wage, Abatan said, “We found out that before the N70,000 was even implemented, the Federal Government has gone ahead to further increase the price of petrol, and we concluded that the two labour centres that went into that negotiation went there blindfolded and naïve.
“The Federal Government took advantage of the naivety and inexperience of Comrade Joe Ajaero, and Festus Usifo, by tricking them into accepting N70,000 and that it would not increase fuel price, but no sooner they agreed to kowtow what was said about N70,000, the Federal Government went ahead to increase fuel price.
“To that extent, the Southwest is rejecting the N70,000 minimum wage that Labour has negotiated and advised that Labour should go back to the negotiating table and insist on the N250,000 they initially wanted.
“Before you know it, the N2,000 that the Federal Government said it was going to increase the fuel price to will eventually emerge. Labour should go back. The value of the N70,000 is just about 60 litres of fuel.
“Labour should go back to negotiate N250,000 minimum wage. They have our backing on whatever is involved even strike to achieve a realistic minimum wage,” the pensioners said.
They praised the governors in the zone for improvement in their attitudes toward senior citizens through various efforts on pensions and gratuities in the different states.
However, Abatan who said that only Ondo State had effected 33 per cent pension increase for its pensioners, appealed, “We want our state governments in the remaining Southwest states to implement 33 per cent pension increase and consequential adjustment which was done for workers in the year 2019.
“If these 33 per cent increases and consequential adjustments are not implemented before the new minimum pension or minimum wage, all pensioners in the country would be shortchanged. So, we appeal to our governors to do the needful”.
Abatan, who said that the pensioners supported local government autonomy, however, said, “The arrangement being put up at the federal and state levels should not tamper with payments of the pensions of retired primary school teachers and pensioners at the local government level.
“The salaries of teachers should also go on. The salaries of workers at the local governments should also go on. The allowances of the chiefs and obas should also be taken care of as first-line charges,” the communique stated.
The pensioners called on the government at the federal and state levels to be proactive to ensure there would be no crisis from the wholesome implementation of the local government autonomy by ensuring there was no return to the era of zero allocation to the councils after the deduction of salaries and pensions.