TRIBUNE NG
Leaders of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on Friday stormed out of the meeting of the Presidential Steering Committee on subsidy palliatives that was scheduled to take place at the presidential villa, Abuja on Friday.
The President of the NLC, Joe Ajaero, had led his delegation to the Chief of Staff’s office, venue of the meeting at about 5pm but were soon on their way out of the villa.
The labour union accused the federal government of using the meetings as a pretext to deceive Nigerians.
A source at the meeting confirmed that three subcommittees were supposed to be present at the meeting including the Mass Transit, the Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) and Cash transfer subcommittees.
The source revealed that the subcommittees were scheduled to brief the steering committee but did not show up.
“So, they are not prepared for the meeting. That’s the truth,” the source declared, maintaining that the government representatives had insisted that the meeting should proceed even though no quorum was formed.
It would have been the fourth on the series of meetings they have held since the implementation of the petroleum subsidy removal.
The meeting was to have been a continuation of the previous meetings over the initial increase of the pump price of petroleum to N520 per litre.
The organized labour has already scheduled a nationwide protest for August 2 to press home their demands over the petroleum subsidy removal.
The last meeting of the steering committee held last Wednesday but government representatives were
unable to convince the labour leaders to shelve their plan for the action.
Wednesday’s meeting, which also took place in the office of the Chief of Staff to the President was attended by Labour delegations led by the NLC president and his Trade Union Congress (TUC) counterpart, Festus Osifo.
Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Ajaero had insisted: “We are going ahead with the protest because we have to be emphatic on what we put in our communique, to say we’re commencing protests from the 2nd.”
On his part, the TUC President said that both sides listened to the presentations from the Steering Committee secretariat and Labour made its input into it.
“Some of the things they presented we did not agree with them. So, the areas we did not agree, we also made our impute known because when you come to such meeting it is for government or its representatives to do a presentation.