The remaining states yet to implement the N70,000 minimum wage for workers are making last-minute moves to ensure the Nigeria Labour Congress does not embark on strike on Monday, December 1.
The states yet to approve the monthly wage are Katsina, Cross River, and Zamfara after the Imo State Government sanctioned the implementation of the N70,000 wage on Tuesday.
It means 33 states and the Federal Capital Territory have now complied with the 2024 National Minimum Wage Act.
Many states agreed to pay above the N70,000 starting point with Lagos and Rivers offering the highest pay with N85,000.
Lagos also announced that its workers could smile to the bank with up to N100,000 monthly from the first quarter of 2025.
Workers in Akwa Ibom, Enugu, Oyo, and Niger will earn N80,000 while Delta and Ogun states approved N77,000.
Ebonyi, Osun, Benue, and Kebbi states approved N75,000; Ondo, N73,000; Kogi and Kaduna, N72,000; Kano and Gombe, N71,000.
Abia, Adamawa, Anambra, Jigawa, Borno, Edo, Kwara, Nasarawa, Taraba, Ekiti, Bauchi, Yobe, Imo, and Plateau states, as well as the Federal Capital Territory, all settled for N70,000.
But despite the NLC’s warnings, trio Katsina, Zamfara, and Cross River have yet to implement the new wage, which could lead to a shutdown of activities in the affected states from Monday.
On Monday, labour unions in Cross River, who are demanding a new wage of N70,000 from the state government, directed state civil servants to embark on a two-day warning strike over the non-implementation of the new minimum wage.
The warning strike was signed by the Nigerian Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress.
This followed a staged walkout from a scheduled meeting held on November 18 with state government officials, who formed members of the wage implementation committee at the office of the state’s Head of Service, Innocent Eteng, in Calabar, the state capital.
According to the labour leaders, last week, when the committee sat for the first time, the meeting ended in a stalemate when they perceived delayed tactics by the government to postpone the meeting to January.
The state’s civil servants said they were utterly disappointed when Governor Bassey Otu announced a new minimum wage of N40,000 on May 1, during the International Workers Day celebration at the U.J Essueine Stadium in Calabar.
Otu said that due to the state’s lean resources, caused by the statutory federal allocation aggravated by the unfavorable state Gross Domestic Product, the new minimum wage of N40,000 would align with realities rather than sentiments.
While citing examples of Edo, Lagos, Rivers, and other governors, the workers said they were full of hope before the unexpected announcement of N40,000.
The strike action, which was signed by the Nigerian Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress, was set to commence from November 24 midnight to 26, 2024.
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