Labour
unions in Ondo State have disagreed with Governor Rotimi Akeredolu over
factional payment of their outstanding salaries after receiving N7.6 billion
Paris Club
Loan refunds.
The unions,
the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC) and Joint
Negotiating Council (JNC) demanded the full payment of their 2016 outstanding
salaries without delay.
A statement
by the NLC Chairman, Bose Daramola, the TUC counterpart, Sola Ekundayo and
Adeleye Oluwole of the JNC disclosed this after their meeting.The governor had
told the workers at a meeting that the funds were not enough to settle the five
months arrears inherited from ex-governor Olusegun Mimiko.
The unions
said the workers would not accept fractional payment of their salaries and
pensions and urged the governor to seek additional funds to offset the
arrears.Akeredolu had said at the meeting that the 75per cent of the funds,
which is N5.7billion, would not be enough to pay the arrears.
He explained
that some deductions were made from the money, including the 25 per cent shared
by the local councils.The Guardian learnt that the governor turned down the
workers’ request that he should devise other means of raising money to pay
them.
Akeredolu
had further proposed that workers at all the grade levels would be paid 80 per
cent of their September 2016 salaries, which the organised labour also
rejected.
According to
the unions, the accountant-general’s office reneged on an agreements reached at
a follow-up meeting that the money should be used to pay the full salaries of
the workers, rather than paying 80 per cent on a grade level basis, as proposed
by the governor.
Meanwhile,
the Kebbi State government has confirmed that it received N5.9billion Parish
Club Loan refunds from the Federal Government.The Commissioner for Finance,
Ibrahim Muhammed Augie disclosed this in Birnin Kebbi, while speaking with
journalists.
He explained
that pensioners in the state had been paid 40 per cent of their
entitlements.According to him: “We received the first batch of the money and
complied with the instruction by the Federal Government that the money should
be used to pay salary arrears and infrastructure development.”
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