Nigerians are facing hunger, unions tell government
The Nigerian Labour
Congress (NLC) and Trade Union Congress (TUC), umbrella unions that represent
millions of workers in Africa's most populous nation, including its dominant
oil sector, said millions are facing hunger, erosion of purchasing power and
insecurity due to reforms that drove up inflation.
President Bola Tinubu
scrapped a popular but costly fuel subsidy last May and lifted restrictions on
currency trading, which more than tripled petrol prices. Africa's biggest
economy is now grappling with a cost of living crisis, fueled by the highest
inflation rate in nearly three decades.
The widespread insecurity
has also hit agricultural output, fuelling food price inflation.
Nigeria's main unions yesterday
gave a two-week ultimatum to the government to meet demands ranging from wage
hikes to improved access to public utilities, and accused it of failing to
uphold pledges to soften the impact of reforms.
The unions in a statement
gave the government 14 days to deal with "issues crucial to the well-being
of Nigerian masses and workers." They did not say what they would do if it
didn't meet demands.
The latest threat comes
after a strike lasting one day in November which was called off following
government intervention. Unions have issued several threats in the past and
demanded the government reverse petrol price hikes.
Also yesterday, state-oil
firm NNPC said it has no plans to increase petrol prices after last week's
devaluation of the local currency, its second in less than a year.
Tinubu has been under
pressure from unions to offer relief to households and small businesses after
he scrapped the subsidy that kept petrol prices cheap but cost the government $10
billion last year.
In north central Niger
state, the governor ordered security agents to seize trucks carrying farm
produce bought from local farmers, saying this was responsible for driving up
food costs in the state, following protests by residents this week.
Niger state, part of the
agriculture-rich middle belt region, mainly produces millet and sorghum, which
traders buy from farmers to resell in markets across Nigeria, including in the
capital Abuja and the commercial city of Lagos.

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