News
Court orders FG, NLC to submit negotiation report on Jan 30, 2019
The National Industrial Court, sitting in Abuja, yesterday, ordered the Federal Government and the organised labour to submit report of their negotiations on the disputes over the new minimum wage by January 30, 2019. The court had, at the last adjourned date, granted an order of ex-parte stopping the labour from proceeding on its planned strike. The NLC had suspended the planned strike action, though not because of the court order, but because the tripartite committee agreed and recommended N30,000 as minimum wage.
The reports had since been submitted to President Muhammadu Buhari. However, when the matter came up yesterday, the three defendants – the National Labour Congress, the Trade Union Congress and the Nigerian Governors’ Forum – were absent and were also not represented by any counsel. But the plaintiffs, the Federal Government and the Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami – were represented by their legal team led by Emmanuel Omonowa. Omonowa, however, informed the court that based on the order made by the court on November 2, negotiations on the new minimum wage were ongoing. He, therefore, prayed the court to give more time to the parties in the suit to enable them to continue with the negotiations and later give a report on the negotiation efforts to the court.
“Pursuant to Order 42(1) of the National Industrial Court Rules, the court should allow parties to see the possibility of amicable settlement of the matter,” Omonowa said. Following Omonowa’s request, the trial judge, Justice Sanusi Kado, restated his November 2 order restraining the labour from embarking on the planned strike and warned all the parties to the suit against taking any step that cause disruptions in the case. He later adjourned till January 30, 2019, for the parties to report to the court on whether or not they had settled amicably or would still be interested in going on with the case. New Telegraph recalls that Justice Kado had, on November 2, in a ruling on an ex parte application moved on behalf of the Federal Government by the Solicitor-General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Justice, Dayo Apata, stopped the labour from embarking on their planned strike scheduled to commence on November 6.
-
Politics6 days ago
JUST-IN: George Turnah Welcomes Isaac Amakuro’s Disassociation from G-House Political Family
-
Business1 day ago
An Open Appeal To The Gov. Of Bayelsa State, Sen. Diri Douye Regarding The Removal Of My Prominent Billboard On Azikoro Road, Near Ekeki Park.
-
News3 days ago
Police have arrested three suspects who offered a pregnant woman N30 million to terminate her six-month-old fetus for a ritual in Niger State
-
Crime6 days ago
Why I Butchered Student I Met on Facebook – Kwara Cleric
-
Gist1 day ago
A housewife in Bauchi has stabbed her husband to death during a dispute over child custody
-
Politics5 days ago
Breaking News: The Federal High Court has ordered PDP to go ahead with its South-South Zonal Congress
-
Politics5 days ago
Rivers Crisis: Eze Warns Tinubu That Posterity Will Judge Him If Fubara Is Humiliated
-
Politics1 day ago
Tension in Osun: LG Workers Stand Their Ground, Defy APC’s Resumption Order