|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Nigeria in midst of strike wave
By Trevor Johnson
6 July 2000
Use
this version to print
Nigeria has been gripped by a strike wave over the level at
which a new minimum wage should be set. The action began two weeks
ago with a strike by civil servants in Lagos state, and quickly
spread throughout the country.
Forty-seven thousand public sector workers have been on strike
for two weeks in Lagos, with refuse dumps not cleared, water taps
running dry and health services collapsing. Civil servants in
at least 12 states, including Anambra, Abia and Ondo, began indefinite
strikes this week. The dispute has been joined by other sections
of workers, including those in the textile and clothing industry.
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has been in talks with
government officials. On Monday, the governors of the country's
36 states said they would only agree to 5,500 naira ($55) a month
as the level for the minimum wage. Workers are demanding between
N6,500 and N7,500.
The minimum wage has a long tradition in Nigeria. Even the
last military dictatorship of General Abdulsalami Abubakar had
a minimum wage of N3,000. Workers regard the level of the minimum
wage as a means of resisting the downward pressure on their living
standards as the deregulation of the Nigerian economy gathers
pace under Obasanjo and his IMF backers.
The current strike wave follows on from a general strike in
response to the 50 percent fuel price increase. Obasanjo saw this
increase as a first step towards bringing all Nigerian prices
into line with the world market. The difficulty in pushing it
through led to a split in the ruling People's Democratic Party
(PDP). Sunday Awoniyi, leader of the splinter group in the PDP,
said, "The blunt but exceedingly painful truth we must accept
without prevarication is that if we went back to the electorate
today, we could not possibly record anything near the kind of
result we had last year in a free and fair election." Awoniyi
was speaking before party members at a meeting (declared illegal
by the ruling faction) in the capital Abuja.
Obasanjo and the PDP are fanning the flames of separatist feelings
in the regions to prevent any unified response to the massive
fall in living standards. Instead of bringing in a national minimum
wage as had been done prior to the military government of Sani
Abacha, the PDP left it to individual states to decide the rate,
whilst contributing only N4,300 towards it.
Abacha had decentralised collective bargaining and negotiations
for the minimum wage in his 1997 budget speech, but it largely
remained on the drawing board until his sudden death in June 1998.
The only exception was the public sector union in Kaduna state,
which attempted to implement Abacha's policy with serious consequences.
The Kaduna Joint Negotiation Council began talks with the state
government on a settlement, but negotiations broke down. Police
immediately arrested 19 labour leaders. When workers took strike
action to demand their release, Lt. Col. Hameed Ali, the state
military administrator, sacked 21,000 of them. Since then, Kaduna
has become the focus of violent religious clashes between Muslim
groupsfunded by big business who want to break away from
central government control and implement Sharia lawand the
minority Christians.
Since Abacha's death, the NLC (Nigeria Labour Congress) has
made no attempt to oppose the increasingly decentralised and deregulated
economy. Despite the unity between state governors on the N5,500
minimum, the NLC and the leaders of the various unions are attempting
to keep the strike action at the level of a series of separate
struggles in the different areas for differing minimum rates.
Emboldened by the lack of an effective response, some governors
are now threatening redundancies to pay for salary increases.
Speaking last Thursday after abortive talks to resolve the eight-day
strike, Lagos governor Bola Tinubu said his administration was
now considering staff rationalisation as a way out of the wages
crisis.
See Also:
Nigeria edges towards civil
war
[4 March 2000]
Religious conflicts in Nigeria
[28 February 2000]
Nigeria
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |