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The Federal Government will today meet leaders of
striking oil workers and other stakeholders in the petroleum sector in a
bid to end the industrial action before it worsens the fuel supply and aggravate other socio-economic indicators in the country.
Vanguard reports already, the workers, on the umbrella
of the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers, NUPENG and its
Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, PENGASSAN’s
counterpart, operating as NUPENGASSAN, have not only stopped loading of
products, major installations in both upstream and downstream have also, been
shut.
Vanguard gathered that the Federal Government through
the Federal Ministries of Labour and Productivity as well as Petroleum
Resources, slated today’s meeting for 11 am in Abuja.
However situations reports across the country
yesterday indicated high level of compliance by workers on the first day of the
strike.
In Lagos, most depots were shut. At Ejigbo Depot, some
tankers that loaded earlier in the day were restricted, but later allowed to
move out of the depot because of the inherent danger.
At Apapa, installations owned by Mobil and Oando were
said to have recorded total compliance. Though there was skeletal work by
NUPENG members at Total depot, but it was later stopped in the course of the
day.
While in Warri, there was no loading, while NUPENG
members were seen wearing red as a sign of protest, in Port Harcourt, a strike
monitoring committee member told Vanguard on condition of anonymity, that there
was total compliance in all oil and gas locations, as the loading bays were
shut.
Similarly, in Kaduna and Abuja, there was also total
compliance on the part of PENGASSAN members.
In Kaduna, the gate of the Kaduna Refinery was shut
and no entrance was allowed into the premises.
A union leader claimed that in the morning, the NNPC
towers was opened for business and workers were at their desks but were later
called to stop work at about 11.45 a.m.
The workers are protesting among others, the inability
of the government to carry out Turn Around Maintenance, TAM, on the refineries
and reduce pump prices of petroleum products in line with the slump in global
prices of crude oil.
Other grievances are delay in the passage of the
Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, global crude oil prices slump, non
-implementation of the Nigeria Oil and Gas Industry Content Development,
NOGICD, Act to reflect Nigerian’s in management positions and expatriate quota
law, appalling state of access roads to refineries and oil depots’ facilities,
insecurity in the country that has led to the death of members, appointments in
government agencies in disregards to succession planning, compulsory deduction from
workers’ salaries for the National Housing Fund, NHF, casualization and
contract staffing and unfair labour practice by companies and government
agencies.
They also include termination of appointment of the
Port Harcourt Zonal Secretary of the Association by Total Exploration and
Production, Total E&P, Nigeria Limited, retardation of staff promotion in
the Petroleum Technology Development Fund, PTDF, non-standardisation of
nomenclature and collective bargaining agreement of the Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory
Agency, NNRA, in line with what is obtained in other agencies in the oil and
gas industry, refusal of the management of Addax/Petrostuff Nigeria Limited and
Chevron/Sudelletra to recall sacked staff.
Meanwhile, Trade Union
Congress of Nigeria, TUC, in Lagos advised the Federal Government to address the
grievances of the oil workers immediately and save Nigerians from another
round of fuel scarcity among other implications of the strike.
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