The Nigeria Labour Congress has stated 
that the N18,000 Minimum Wage is due for upward review, saying it will 
resist attempts by state governors to reduce the current wage.
NLC, in a communiqué at the end of the 
Central Working Committee’s meeting of the union, said it was ready to 
mobilise its members for a protest in any state that the prevailing wage
 or retrenched workers.
The communiqué signed by its President, 
Ayuba Wabba, and the Secretary-General, Dr. Peter Ozo-Eson, observed 
that while some governors had denied plans to reduce the minimum wage, 
others threatened to sack workers or reduce the wage.
The congress said minimum wage was legally due for review, saying no governor could unilaterally change it.
NLC restated its opposition to an increase in the pump price of fuel as well as the planned subsidy removal.
The union pointed out that the 45 per 
cent tariff increase in electricity was an additional burden on 
consumers, saying the increase would have an effect on businesses, 
especially manufacturing.
It added, “A 45 per cent increase in 
electricity tariff at this point in time with the challenges in the 
economy, which have adversely reduced the purchasing power of the 
ordinary Nigerian and slowed down business, including manufacturing, is 
not justifiable.
“The distribution companies have 
continued to exploit Nigerians through estimated billing systems for the
 majority of consumers, while deliberately refusing to make pre-paid 
metres available.”
The CWC said it, therefore, resolved to 
reject the tariff increase and demanded that prepaid metres be made 
available free to all consumers.
Meanwhile, the General Secretary of the 
National Union of Textile, Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria, Mr.
 Issa Aremu, has urged the NLC to engage the Federal Government on the 
2010 Report of the Committee on Deregulation over the rumoured fuel 
subsidy removal.
He stated that the NLC and its President, Wabba, should ensure that government implemented the recommendations.
According to him, this is the only way to address the problem in the downstream sector of the petroleum industry.
He spoke in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, on Wednesday, on the sidelines of a special prayer for his late wife, Hamdalat.
He said, “On the issue of fuel subsidy, 
it is the opinion of our union, NTGTWN, that CWC-in-Session should 
engage the government on the 2010 Report of the Committee on 
Deregulation and ensure government implements the recommendation.”
Aremu, who is the Secretary of the 
Alumni Association of the National Institute, canvassed greater role for
 women in national governance, institutions and workplaces.
He stated that women had strategic roles
 to play in nation building, urging women to be exemplary and make 
positive difference in their endeavours.
Aremu added, “I will like to use this 
occasion to call on authorities and individuals, government and 
corporate organisations to bring women to the mainstream in the 
families, at workplaces, government institutions and the society at 
large.
“Nigeria is totally imperilled if either
 by omission or commission, women join in the present obscenely 
advertised madness of the ruling male elite; the manifestations of which
 include political blood-letting, wholesale corruption, fuel scarcity, 
water shortage, energy failure, armed robbery, university closures, etc.
“In place of pessimism and despair, 
women must raise the banner of optimism and hope. We don’t need ‘iron’ 
ladies, who will outdo men in their already discredited rough-shoulder 
macho-politics of greed, grab-grab and hack-down-the-opponents.
“On the contrary, we need women that are
 knowledge-driven, sober and humble, enough to forge consensus in the 
areas of development and poverty eradication. These are the values of 
women I have been privileged to be associated with.
 

