FG Ban On Strike Threats To Industrial Peace, Says TUC

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The Trade Union Congress, (TUC) has lamented that the announcement made by the Federal Government that it has banned strikes in the aviation industry and other sectors it called “essential services” is a serious threat to industrial peace and harmony in the country.
This was disclosed in a statement by the President of TUC, Comrade Festus Osifo, stressing that forceful implementation of this directive by the government will be met with stiff resistance that might lead to the breakdown of law and order in the country.
According to him,  “Aviation Minister, Hadi Abubakar Sirika who announced the so-called ban on behalf of the Buhari administration should know that the Aviation law he refers to which he claims empowers the government to ban strikes, cannot override neither the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria nor the fundamental rights of Nigerians to withdraw their labour if they deem it necessary.
“The TUC calls on all organizations including professional and market associations, student unions and civil society organizations to join in resisting government attempts to abridge the fundamental rights of the Nigerian people when that time comes.
“This is unambiguously stated in the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention 87 on Freedom of Association and the Right to organize.
Section 20 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) bans forced or compulsory labour which means no Nigerian citizen can be forced to work if he or she chooses not to work. Government and its handlers should always do everything possible to address issues of welfare raised by different unions and also respect the letters of any collective agreement that it entered into. This is the only way a strike can be averted and not by any surreptitious or clandestine moves or pronouncements.
He explained that the Minister’s claim that strikes are unnecessary because: “As a government, our ears are always open, the government is open to listening to any grievances and there are procedures for dealing with this kind of grievances”  sounds hollow.
“If indeed government listens, it would have listened to Air Transport Services Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (ATTSSSAN) members and the aviation staff’s long-standing demands rather than force them into a strike. If the truly government listens, it would not have allowed the university teachers’ strike to drag on for eight months simply because it failed to honour an agreement it willfully entered into. And even after the strike was called off; it continues to withhold the unpaid salaries of the academics, which itself is a provocative and unfair labour practice.
“The TUC also wishes to state that strike in the aviation industry is not a peculiarly Nigerian issue; it is a right exercised universally by workers. In the past few months, airport and airline staff in France, Belgium, Portugal and Italy has gone on strike. This same week aviation staff went on strike in Nigeria and their counterparts in some other countries also did.
The TUC assures ATTSSSAN members and aviation workers and indeed all the working people of our country of its solidarity and its readiness to side with them in all their legitimate disputes with government or employers in furtherance of their interests.
We advise the Buhari administration to concentrate on good governance, make petroleum products available, protect Nigerians against rampaging bandits and hyperinflation and allow a peaceful transition of power rather than provoke unnecessary labour unrest.

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