Friday, 19 December 2014

PENGASSAN, NUPENG call off strike

  
NIGERIA’S striking oil workers on Friday suspended their five-day industrial action after a lengthy meeting with the Federal Government, TheCable reports.

The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN) on Monday embarked on a strike in protest of unresolved labour issues, prompting long queues for fuel in the Federal Capital Territory and other parts of the country.

Two among the unions’ protestations were the failure of the government to carry out turn around maintenance of the nation’s refineries and cut down the prices of petroleum products in line with the fall of global oil price.

 Another grouse of the unions was the sacking of a member, Elo Victor Ogbonda, by Total, after she was elected a zonal executive of PENGASSAN. The unions demanded her immediate reinstatement, but the oil giant’s refusal to reinstate Ogbonda was believed to have the tacit sanction of the government.

 However, after a 12-hour closed-door meeting, representatives of the unions and the government delegation led by Taminu Turaki, the supervising minister of labour, issued a joint communiqué with a promise by the government to resolve the issues raised by the unions. The scarcity of petrol caused by the strike was biting in the capital city, as motorists complained that a litre of petrol at the black market was sold for N250.

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