THE
Federal Government has ordered the retrenchment of no fewer than 20,000 workers
of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN, ahead of takeover by successful
bidders of its assets.
It
was gathered that the Bureau for Public Enterprises, BPE, issued the
directive to the Chief Executive Officers, CEOs, of the 18 successor companies
to PHCN at a meeting in Abuja, to compile names and drastically reduce the
50,000 strong workforce before the new investors take over.
It was gathered that new investors demanded
that the workforce must be pruned before government hands off.
Though
it is not clear how government arrived at this figure, however, General
Secretary of the National Union of Electricity Employees, NUEE, Mr Joe Ajaero,
who confirmed the directive to massively retrench the workforce, said it was
obvious that the Federal Government had decided to truncate the implementation
of the collective agreement reached with the unions.
Already, organised labour had kicked
against the move and warned the government against such action even as the
agreement reached between both parties in December 2012 on the terminal
benefits of workers had not been implemented.
The Senior Staff Association of Electricity
and Allied Companies, SSAEAC, has petitioned the government through the Federal
Ministry of Labour to explain the dangers and futility of government action
when agreement on terminal benefits had not been honoured by the government.
On its part, NUEE directed members to shut
down the power sector once any worker is issued a retrenchment letter without a
financial back up in line with the December 2012 agreement.
NUEE, in a statement by Ajaero, rejected
the planned retrenchment of workers without honouring the agreement the
government entered into with the workers.
According to NUEE, “our attention has been
drawn to the nocturnal meetings being held between Federal Government and all
chief executive officers in Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN, where a
mandate to retrench workers in the power sector has been handed down to them.
It is rather unfortunate and provoking that the Federal Government is hatching
such obnoxious idea when agreement reached with the unions on payment of
severance benefit is yet to be implemented.
“Information reaching us reveals that
arrangement to close down PHCN’s Corporate Headquarters has been put in place.
While people are still working, government plans to kill their management.
“It was equally gathered that the Federal
Government has concluded plans not to pay pension or transfer money to the
Pension Fund Administrators, PFAs, all in the name of driving workers to their
early graves. We are worried that the government could be privatizing without
cash backing, as information at our disposal suggests that about N43 billion is
available out of the over N400 billion agreed with the unions.
“At the moment, agreement on certain
indices to be used in calculating entitlements like life expectancy which the
Federal Government put at 14 years is yet to be reconciled.
“By this posture, it is obvious that the
Federal Government has decided to truncate the implementation of collective
agreement reached with the unions. Nigerians should, therefore, hold government
responsible for any reaction this action may generate.
“While there is still opportunity for the
Federal Government to follow due process, we wish to state unequivocally that
PHCN workers will legitimately resist every attempt to shave their hair in
their absence. Should the Federal Government make good its threat to retrench
workers in the sector when labour issues have not been settled, all members are
advised to stop work, while those monies paid into their accounts should be
seen as free money. The hour has come for you to defend your rights.”
Meanwhile, the Federal Government has said it is now set to pay
off the staff of PHCN. The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Power,
Ambassador Godknows Igali disclosed this, weekend.
Igali told journalists in Abuja that the
fund for the payment of the workers’ severance package was ready and that in a
matter of weeks, they would be paid as part of the process of the takeover of
the sector by private investors.
His words: ”What we have done so far is to
try to ensure that the entitlement of these people and their severance package
is well calculated from the point of their engagement to the point where the
government is bringing the private people to take over.
“We have agreed on virtually
everything. Government is preparing towards the formal takeover by the
private sector. We expect the process to be seamless. So far, there is no major
problem; the fund required to pay the people is available.”
The Permanent Secretary expressed satisfaction at the resolution
of the issues surrounding the disengagement with the PHCN staff as well as
casual workers and assured that the Federal Government was working to
ensure that they were all happily disengaged.
According to him, the new owners would
certainly re-engage many of the workers as it would be practically impossible
to operate without the old staff. He said the private sector operators would be
made to adhere to the nation’s labour laws.
His words: “The people that are working in
these power plants are Nigerians, and when the private people take over, they
are not going to bring workers from Jupiter, Mercury or China; most of their
workers would remain Nigerians.
“The only difference is that they have been
government workers up till now and as the government finishes with them, they
will transfer their services to private operators who are driving the sector
now. But the private sector will still follow the Labour law of this country.
“So, it is not a situation of whether there
is going to be mass exodus of people out of the sector. Most of these workers
have been very competent; they have been serving the country very well with
commitment. And you cannot just replace those who have been on the job for many
years.”
For those who would not be re-employed by
the new owners and those who may choose to go into private business,
Igali said: “Government also has a very robust programme to train and retrain
the workers of most of these companies. Retraining them is at two levels: first
is to retrain people in such a way that they can fit into a new nature of the
sector. Before it was public service but now, we have private people
taking over.
“So we are retraining them so that those
who will continue working on contract basis will fit into the system properly.
The second training is directed at those who would opt for private life. A lot
of people may want to go into consultancy; like I said, the private people
coming in cannot go out of the country to import thousands upon thousands of
workers to take over our electricity sector. They will still need these same
people.
“Government from the highest political
authority has assured people of their commitment to ensure that all parties are
satisfied with the way the issues are resolved.”
He added that the power reform transaction
signing summit presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan, last Monday, was
an eloquent demonstration of highest commitment by the government to
ensure a successful conclusion of the power transaction.
The Perm Sec said $600 million (about N94
billion) was realised from the 25 per cent initial payments by the investors in
the power sector and that they were equally determined to make the transactions
successful with some even ready to make 100 per cent payment of their bid
prices ahead of the 90-day stipulated payment period.
He said: “Some are ready to pay 100 per
cent but 25 per cent was what was required at this stage and the total amount
from the information we have from BPE is about $600m.”
Igali said power generation had risen to
over 4,500 and that the Federal government’s target of 9-10,000 at the end of
the year was still intact.
He claimed that some major cities of the
nation now enjoy about 16 hours of electricity daily.
Tags
Politics
With the rate of unemployment i̶̲̥̅̊n̶̲̥̅̊ the country we cannot afford †̥ retrench 20000 workers. Govt please do more on job creation and job retention also emphsis should be on labour intensive production and manufacturing please let govt discourage machination untill we find a way out of this unemployment saga we have found ourself
ReplyDeleteGod save Naija.Wich kind government is dis?there is massive unemployment n govt want to retrench 20,000.dis administration is nt working @ all.dis will increase the crime rate in dis country.Govt reconsider or pay them off well to use n start business
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