Civil rights advocacy group, HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA (HURIWA) has strongly condemned the alleged request for N1 billion by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Senator George Akume, to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, for the workings of a 37-man national minimum wage committee. described this as wasteful, insensitive, and irresponsible.
HURIWA said even though it was however reported that President Tinubu had allegedly approved half of the budget of N500,000,000 for the SGF, as contained in some leaked memos, the idea of setting up such a money-guzzling presidential committee on Wage negotiations is unacceptable and irregular in the face of a statutory body known as the National Incomes, salaries, and Wages Commission in existence which is clothed by law with the sole mandates of fixing or negotiating for wages both in the public and private sectors of the Nigerian federation.
This was made known through a release made available to newsmen, which was signed by the National Coordinator of HURIWA, Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko.
HURIWA carpeted the Secretary to the Government of the Federation for not advising the president appropriately to consult the already existing governmental institution for wage negotiations, queries why the government is wasting N500 million or even N1 billion for a different wage negotiations committee and neglecting the government institution responsible for that even in the face of mass hunger, absolute poverty and multidimensional poverty afflicting over 133 million Nigerian households.
This is just as the Rights group stated that the decision to fritter such a precious amount of public funds to fund a temporary committee, is pure economic sabotage and an economic crime of unprecedented dimension.
HURIWA recalled that under the National Salaries, incomes and Wages Commission Act, the body has the statutory broad mandates, and functions and is clothed by law with the comprehensive coverage of issues of personnel compensation just as the other main functions amongst other salient Components.
According to the group their roles include, advising the Federal Government on national income policy; Recommends the proportions of income growth that shall be utilized for a general wage increase; Informs the Federal Government of current and incipient trends in wages, and proposing guidelines within which increase in wages shall be confined;
HURIWA insisted that there is no lawful need for another illegal contraption in the name of a committee on salaries just put up to gulp public funds because the existing frameworks setting up the National Salaries, incomes and Wages Commission saddle the Agency with the additional functions of to Keeps the Federal Government informed continuously of movement of all forms of income and propose guidelines relating to profits, dividends and all incomes other than wages; Encourages research on wage structure.
Highlighting that their role includes, industrial, occupational regional, and any other similar factor), income distribution, and household consumption patterns; Keeps prices under continuous surveillance, interprets price movements, and relates them to other developments in the national economy;
Proposes measures for the regulation of prices and wages in the various sectors of the economy and the control of hoarding.
Other functions are: to Encourages and promotes schemes for raising productivity in all sectors of the economy; Establishes and runs a data bank or other information center relating to data on wages and prices or any other variable and for that purpose to collaborate with data collection agencies to design and develop an adequate information system; informs and educates the public on prices, wages and productivity, their relationships with one another and their inter-play in determining standards of living and real economic growth; and amongst others to: Examines and advises on any matter referred to it by the Federal and State Governments concerning any of the functions conferred on it by or pursuant to the Act; Examines areas in which rationalization and harmonization of wages, salaries and other conditions of employment are desirable and feasible as between the public and private sectors of the economy and recommends guidelines which will ensure sustained harmony in work compensation policies in both the public and private sectors.
But HURIWA lamented that even when there was no need for constituting another wage negotiations committee since there is a body in existence that is recognized by law for such functions and is being maintained with taxpayersโ money, the government through Vice President Kashim Shettima had on January 30, 2024, inaugurated the Tripartite Committee on New National Minimum Wage at the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa, Abuja. HURIWA describes this move as regrettable.
A letter dated 18th January 2024, addressed to President Tinubu with the title, โRequest For Approval Of Funds And Inauguration of the Tripartite Committee On National Minimum Wage,โ reads in parts: โThis memorandum seeks your approval of the following in respect of the above subject matter: The release of the sum of One Billion Naira only for the above exercise. This has been scaled down from N1.8 billion.โ
โThe 26th January 2024 for the inauguration of the Committee. All relevant documents are hereby attached.
โThe New Minimum Wage is expected to be ready by 1st April 2024 according to Law.โ
It was, however, reported that a handwritten response from the president instructed the committee to cut down its budget by 50 percent and start with the approved sum of N500m.
HURIWA criticized the establishment of a wasteful committee on wage negotiations, however demanded public explanation to Nigerians by the Federal Government why it decided to waste public funds amidst hunger when there is a body that ought to handle wage negotiations in Nigeria.
This is just as the Rights group asked that the committee be compelled to refund the N500 million to the Treasury Single Account and for the President to allow the National Salaries, incomes, and Wages Commission to handle that task since that is their fundamental statutory mandate.