Labour rejects FG’s N62,000 minimum wage offer, may resume strike on Tuesday
The organised labour says it will not accept N62,000 or N100,000 as the minimum wage for workers.
Speaking on ‘Morning Brief’, a Channels Television programme, on Monday, Chris Onyeka, assistant general secretary of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), said the union will not negotiate a ”starvation wage”.
On June 4, the NLC and Trade Union Congress (TUC) “relaxed” their nationwide strike for one week.
The labour unions had embarked on the strike after negotiations with the federal government on a new minimum wage hit a brick wall.
The organised labour had repeatedly proposed N615,500 and N494,000 as the new national minimum wage, which the government said was unrealistic.
On June 7, the federal government increased its offer for the new minimum wage for workers from N60,000 to N62,000; the labour unions insisted on ₦250,000 at the last meeting of the tripartite committee on minimum wage as the living wage for an average Nigerian worker.
Afterwards, Hope Uzodimma, governor of Imo state, said the tripartite committee on the minimum wage is close to reaching a consensus.
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