Mass sack: NECA cautions NUBIFIE against picketing
The Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) has condemned the planned picketing of select Banks by the National Union of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions Employees.
The Employers body stated that the Union’s action is being emboldened by the ill-conceived recent pronouncement and directive by the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, on retrenchment in the banking sector, which it said infringed on the rights and prerogatives of Employers in Nigeria.
NECA affirmed that the labour law recognizes the right of employer to determine the manning level for their operations, without approval from the Ministry of labour and Employment, while respecting the provision of Section 20 of the Labour Act, where and if a labour union exists in the organisation.
The NECA’s Director General, Mr. Olusegun Oshinowo, stated that “it was most unfortunate that the Minister’s comment has been fueling impunity and gross abuse of rules and principles of Industrial Relations in Nigeria. The law about dispute settlement is clear in Nigeria. If the Union has any issue with the action of the employer, it should seek recourse in the Industrial Court rather than take laws into its hands. We expect the Minister to call the Union to order and urge them to follow due process of the law in seeking justice for their cause”.
Mr. Oshinowo further said that “in exercising their right to picket, the Union should realize that such an action should not impinge on the right of the enterprise to conduct its business. There are, of course, limits to the right of picket and if the Union should cross the line by encroaching on the rights of other actors in the economy, that would amount to criminality for which we expect the Police to arraign the offenders before the appropriate court.”
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He noted that the Oyo State Government had demonstrated a worthy example of what the authority should do in the event of unlawful picketing and strike by arraigning before the court Trade Unionists that had breached their Union immunity in the course of strike/picketing. According to him, the right to strike/picket or Union immunity is not a license for impunity and criminality.
NECA calls on the government to instill sanity into the industrial relations system, which unfortunately is currently in a state of rot, by insisting that the Union conducts its affair within the context of the law, particularly the dispute settlement procedure, which actually forbids strike and picketing until the process has been given a chance to resolve issues in dispute.
Mr. Oshinowo averred that “if the government fails to compel the Union to respect the labour laws and protect business from the disruptive action of an illegal picket, the employer will take government’s indifference as a signal that the government is least concerned about reviving our flagging economy”.
“NECA will ensure that any employer that is conducting retrenchment meets with appropriate body in the work place including the Union, where one exists, and that the employer pays redundancy benefits to affected employees. Mr. Oshinowo added “any employee who has suffered redundancy and who was not paid his or her benefits by the employer should contact NECA”. NECA, however, says “No” to impunity and rules of the jungle by the Union and calls on the government to ensure law and order in the industrial and commercial community.”
Mr. Oshinowo called on the Inspector General of Police, Mr. Solomon Arase, to rise up to the security challenge of ensuring that Nigerians are not prevented from access to their banks by the planned illegal action of the Union.
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