The Organised Labour has agreed to suspend its planned nationwide indefinite strike.
The Executive Members of the Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) have directed their members to resume work at the nationโs seaports and oil and gas platform.
A report stated that the Labour bodies reached the agreement after a closed-door meeting with Federal Government officials at the Presidential Villa Abuja, on Sunday.
The indefinite industrial action was scheduled to begin from midnight of Tuesday, October 3.
Meanwhile, the meeting between FG officials, led by the Presidentโs Chief of Staff, Femi Gbajabiamila, will continue on Monday to further streamline issues surrounding fuel subsidy and leadership interventions.
NLC President, Joe Ajaero, who was said to have addressed newsmen after the four-hour meeting, disclosed that the N25,000 announced by President Bola Tinubu in his Independence Day anniversary broadcast is now applicable across the board and not only to โlow-grade workersโ.
The leadership of the NLC and the Trade Union Congress, TUC, will meet with organs of workersโ unions across the country to announce a decision to suspend the planned nationwide indefinite strike
President-General of MWUN, Prince Adewale Adeyanju, in a statement on Monday night, said an agreement had been reached with the government and the strike would no longer hold.
โThe Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) have jointly suspended the indefinite strike billed for October 3, 2023, following the removal of fuel subsidy.
โIt would be recalled that the Nigeria Labour Congress had directed its affiliate member Unions across the country to mobilize and shut down the country following the refusal of the government to adhere to the seven points demand made by the NLC and the TUC to ameliorate the suffering of the teeming Nigerian Workers and the impoverished masses of the countryโ, a statement signed by MWUN media head, Com John Kennedy Ikemefuna.
In a report, the members of the Nigeria Labour Congress and the Trade Union Congress are still in a meeting with the federal government as of the time of filing this report.