General
secretary of PENGASSAN, Lumumba Okugbawa
|
We’ll be ready for dialogue Monday — PENGASSAN
Labour
leaders have said they will not be available for a meeting with the Federal
Government scheduled for today, as oil workers, yesterday, made good their
threat to begin a nationwide strike despite frantic efforts by government,
through the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, to stop the
action.
The Nation report continues:
Workers,
on the platform of Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of
Nigeria, PENGASSAN, had begun gradual withdrawal from offshore, loading bays
and flow stations.
Among
the grievances are Joint Ventures, JV, funding/cash call arrears, which the
union said had stalled investment and creation of new jobs.
Others
include lack of a clear-cut direction on the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB,
forcible co-option of government agencies in the industry into the Integrated
Personnel Payroll Information System, IPPIS, and the spate of redundancy and
retrenchments in the oil and gas industry.
An
earlier meeting scheduled for yesterday between leaders of oil workers and
government representatives was later shifted to today on the prompting of
government.
However,
labour leaders have written government that they would not be available for
today’s meeting, saying they would be ready on Monday.
In
a notice postponing yesterday’s meeting, an official of the Ministry of Labour,
which convened the meeting, wrote to inform the labour leaders.
It
read in part: “I am directed by the Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator
Chris Ngige, to inform you that in consideration of the season and national
holidays, the conciliation meeting earlier scheduled to hold on Thursday, July
7, shall now hold on Friday, July 8, by 11a.m. at the Boardroom of the Minister
of State for Petroleum Resources, 12th floor, NNPC Towers.”
… responds to FG’s letter
Responding
to the notice, PENGASSAN wrote to the government: “We have looked at the
contents and analyzed the possibility of holding such a meeting at such short
notice, considering the period of festivities also.
“It
is based on the above that we are suggesting that we meet with you on Monday,
July 11. However, please note that it is the National Executive Council,
NEC-in-session that can vacate this action (strike).”
PENGASSAN
National Public Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojugbana, said in a statement
yesterday: “There is no iota of truth in the report that the strike had been
called off or suspended.
“Some
of our members offshore have been withdrawn, while those on critical equipment
have commenced gradual shutting down before final disengagement.
“Our
members, especially those in offices and downstream sector, will join tomorrow
(today) as they resume from Eid-el-Fitr holiday.”
Oil Workers Begin Strike
...meeting with FG fails
to hold
Daily
Trust reports that Oil workers’ strike commenced yesterday with the withdrawal
of their members from offshore, loading bays and flow stations nationwide.
Last minute efforts by the federal government to prevent the strike collapsed as the meeting between the ministers of labour and petroleum resources with the workers’ failed to hold yesterday in Abuja.
Last minute efforts by the federal government to prevent the strike collapsed as the meeting between the ministers of labour and petroleum resources with the workers’ failed to hold yesterday in Abuja.
The
meeting called by Sen. Chris Ngige and Ibe Kachikwu to put a lasting solution
to the lingering problems in the sector was postponed till today due to the
Sallah holidays, a statement by labour ministry spokesman, Samuel Olowookere,
said.
The National Public Relations Officer of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), Comrade Emmanuel Ojugbana, told our reporter on phone that there was no meeting with the government
because the invitation came late and no date had been agreed with the government.
“In other words the strike continues,” he said.
The National Public Relations Officer of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), Comrade Emmanuel Ojugbana, told our reporter on phone that there was no meeting with the government
because the invitation came late and no date had been agreed with the government.
“In other words the strike continues,” he said.
Ojugbana
in a statement later said the strike commenced despite the Eid el-Fitr holiday.
“Our members, especially those in offices and downstream sector, will join tomorrow (Friday) as they resume from the Eid el-Fitr holiday,” he added.
“Our members, especially those in offices and downstream sector, will join tomorrow (Friday) as they resume from the Eid el-Fitr holiday,” he added.
He
said media reports that the strike had been called off or suspended was false.
“As
we speak now, some of our members that are in the offshore have been withdrawn,
while others who are on critical equipment have commenced gradual shut down of
such equipment before their final disengagement,” he added.
Why the strike
Why the strike
The
workers’ major grievance is the issue of Joint Venture (JV) funding and cash
call debts owed International Oil Companies (IOCs) by the government.
Normally,
two-thirds of Nigeria’s oil is produced under various JVs with IOCs like Shell,
Chevron, Agip, etc, with the NNPC holding either a 55 or 60 percent equity interest
in each joint venture.
Cash
call payments are each partner’s share of the operating and capital expenses
contributed by both partners to fund joint venture activities. The federal
government, through the annual budget process, pays the cash call, but has not
funded it adequately as the NNPC has for years amassed multi-billion dollar
cash call debts.
Ojugbana
said around US$7bn was owed the companies as cash call arrears and that had
meant delayed projects, no investments and sacking of union members by the
companies.
Other reasons, according to the workers, include lingering irregular lack of clear cut directions on the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), forceful co-option of government agencies in the industry into the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System (IPPIS) and a spate of redundancies and retrenchments in the oil and gas industry.
NUPENG to join strike
Other reasons, according to the workers, include lingering irregular lack of clear cut directions on the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), forceful co-option of government agencies in the industry into the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System (IPPIS) and a spate of redundancies and retrenchments in the oil and gas industry.
NUPENG to join strike
Nigerians
may gradually begin to experience fuel shortage in the days to come if the
situation is not urgently arrested, as PENGASSAN said it had got the support of
its sister union, the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers
(NUPENG), to join the strike.
Our
correspondents gathered that representatives of NUPENG were at yesterday’s
botched meeting in solidarity with PENGASSAN.
The
strike could cripple activities in the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR),
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), Petroleum Equalisation
Fund (Monitoring Board) PEF (MB), Pipelines and Products Marketing Company
(PPMC), National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS), oil majors,
labour and contract services companies.
Although
union members insisted that the action originally commenced yesterday, there
was no evidence of a strike in NAPIMS, PPMC and DPR offices when our
correspondent visited there yesterday because of the extended Sallah break.
The
Lagos Zonal chairman of PENGASSAN, Comrade Abel Agarin, told our correspondent
that there was no going back on the plan by the union to protest the challenges
in the sector.
Agarin
said there was nothing concrete on ground in the immediate term to suggest that
the federal government wanted his members to dialogue on the issue and marshal
strategies to resolve them. According to him, PENGASSAN has carried out
intensive mobilization to ensure that the industrial action is successful.
Contradictory tune
But
the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Petroleum and Natural Gas
Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) and NUPENG have postponed the
meeting with Federal Government over their planned strike till July 11 and as a
result, the unions put the planned strike on hold. Alhaji Tokunbo Korodo, the
South West Chairman, Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers made
this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos
yesterday.
According
to Korodo, the meeting which was scheduled to take place yesterday was shifted
due to public holiday.
The
chairman, who is one of NUPENG’s representatives, said both parties had agreed
to meet on Monday, July 11 to deliberate on the issues affecting the unions.
Our correspondent reports that PENGASSAN leaders however disputed the claim,
saying the strike would go on.
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