Organised labour at the weekend said it would mobilise workers to
protest moves to remove minimum wage from the exclusive to concurrent
legislative list.
The President, United Labour Congress (ULC), Joe
Ajaero, disclosed this at the pre-2017 May Day
seminar organised by
ULC, in Lagos.The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the
concurrent list stipulates that powers are shared jointly by both the
central and regional or state governments as stipulated in the
Constitution, even though both governments can make law on matters that
fall under the concurrent list, the central government is supreme.
This
means that in case there is a conflict of law made by both governments,
the law will supersedes that of the regional or state government.
According
to Ajaero, the move is ill-motivated to deny workers their right to
live well which is what some of the governors have been advocating but
we will mobilise against them.
He
said that If the planned delisting of wage from the exclusive
legislative list succeeds, it means that the country would no longer
have a national minimum wage.
“It means that each state of the
federation will be empowered to legislate and arrive at what should be
their respective minimum,” he said.
Meanwhile the Commissioner of
Police (CP) in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Musa Kimo, has
warned those planning to stage a protest during Workers’ Day to desist
from it.
A statement by the Police Public Relations Officer
(PPRO), Usen Omorodion, yesterday in Abuja said intelligence report has
shown that a “certain group identified as the indigenous people of
Biafra (IPOB) has threatened to take over the street of FCT in the name
of registering their protest.”
The police warned that any
individual or group found indulging in acts capable of breaching the
peace, especially protests that may result in the breakdown of law and
order in the nation’s capital would be charged as appropriate.
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