The unions, in a joint statement made available to PREMIUM
TIMES, said the workers were disengaged from their duty posts at the nation’s
refineries.
The statement was signed by the National President of
NUPENG, Williams Akporeha; National President of PENGASSAN, Ndukaku Ohaeri; as
well as Messrs Afolabi Olawale and Lumumba Okugbawa, general secretaries of
NUPENG and PENGASSAN, respectively.
Titled ‘NUPENG and PENGASSAN strongly react to comments by
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, on refineries and oil
and gas workers’, the unions faulted comments made by Mr Sylva about the fate
of the workers.
The unions said the minister’s statements “were laced with
fabricated misinformation, misrepresentation of facts and falsehoods.” They
noted that the statements include claims that the refineries have not been
working for three years and workers have been receiving salaries and promotion;
that workers were responsible for the sorry state of the refineries; and that
the union threatened to go on strike when the NNPC threatened to sack support
staff.
“The Union/Association found the comments of the minister
most uncharitable and appalling,” the statement said. They added that the
minister only attempted to place policy failure, maladministration, lack of
foresight and mismanagement of the refineries on hapless workers.
The statement reads in part: “On the purported threat of the
Group Managing Director of NNPC to sack workers, we wish to state here that it
was actually no more a threat but that it had already been carried out with the
sack of 850 support staff in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic, throwing almost a
thousand workers into hard financial situation without an iota of empathy or
consultation with the union,” it said.
The unions claimed that they never threatened to go on strike, but rather demanded to be engaged for a proper discussion on the commensurate terminal benefits of the workers, who already worked for 10 to 15 years.
“We found it rather highly inhuman and unfair on the part of
NNPC management to sack these workers with only their last pay cheques after 15
good years of their lives in NNPC,” the unions said.
“If a Minister of Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Group
Managing Director of NNPC can dismiss contract workers that have served for
more than 10 years continuously as if they are rodents, what more can we expect
from lOCs. The monthly salaries of 25 of these contract staff put together
cannot equal a typical management staff salary of the same organisation.”
But in his reaction on Monday, the NNPC spokesperson, Kennie Obateru, said the affected workers are not staff of the corporation, but of third party contracting firms, who were laid off because of redundancy.
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