PENGASSAN strike continues, as mediation talk ends in deadlock

PENGASSAN strike continues, as mediation talk ends in deadlock



The mediation meeting to resolve the ongoing dispute between Dangote Refinery and Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENSASSAN) ended in a deadlock as both parties could not come to terms, after about nine hours of meeting.

The meeting which was chaired by Muhammad Dingyadi, minister of Labour and Employment, had leadership of PENGASSAN, Dangote Refinery, Minister of Finance, and key directors of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission and Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority in attendance. 

Speaking to journalists after the meeting at the early hours of Tuesday, Festus Osifo, president of PENGASSAN explained that the meeting could not resolved the issues at hand as the management of Dangote Refinery refused to reinstate the sacked staff.

He insisted that the demand of the association was the reinstatement of the 800 staff that were sacked, adding that the strike action continues without their reinstatement. 

“Yes, as you could see, we’ve been here for about nine hours trying to find solutions. And we’ve had numerous deliberations from the larger team we broke into a smaller team trying to find solutions. But unfortunately, there is no solution tonight. 

“Because all we want is that we have 800 people plus that are at home, these people, they are fathers, they are mothers, their career is at stake. When you terminate people the way you’ve terminated them, it will be extremely difficult for them to find jobs anywhere.

” Some of these people are trainees and you said they have committed sabotage. So if they go home like that, there is no other company they will get jobs to do again in Nigeria because they have seen them as saboteurs. So these are careers that will be damaged if proper remedy is not put in place.

“So that is why for us, our position has been very clear; you have to reinstate these people. If you reinstate them tonight, we will call off our action tonight but unfortunately, that reinstatement did not happen. And we were not able to reach conclusions on the subject. 

“So they have asked us to come back again by 2 o’clock tomorrow and we will continue to pray. Or rather, 2 o’clock today. We are already on Tuesday, 30th September. So we will reconvene. And we pray that God should touch the heart of the capitalists. God should touch the heart of the oppressors for them to call our people back to work. So as it is, just as we have communicated, the strike continues until we come back again to see if we can find a solution to the issues,” Osifo said.

For Muhammad Dingyadi, minister of Labour and Employment, the Federal Government is committed to resolving the dispute which according to him revolves around the sacked staff and unionization of workers. 

He said that the parties agreed to reconvene by 2pm to resolve the dispute. 

“There are no other issues now, the issue of unionization and the 800 staff that were sacked. These are two basic issues that we have been discussing.

“We have not arrived at any position. We are still working, we are still talking.

Also speaking, Wale Edun, minister of finance and coordinating minister of the economy said that what is  of utmost importance in the minds of everybody, the public, the government, the investors, and economic actors generally, is the need to limit the damage the action could have on the economy.

“We need to wrap it up, we need to resolve it, and we need to have workers going back to work. We need to have the gas flowing. We need to have food flowing as imports into production, which is where the economy has arrived at right now, where we are able to add value, where we are able to grow the economy.

“And we don’t want that momentum to be broken. And that’s why you see us here for nine hours trying to resolve just one naughty issue, as the Honorable Minister for Labor and Employment has said, and we are optimistic that by tomorrow we will break the deadlock, we will resolve the stalemate, and we will put this issue behind us and be able to keep the Nigerian economy going forward as it is currently at present. It’s important that we maintain the momentum of growth, of upward trajectory of the Nigerian economy,” Edun said.



Source: Businessday

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