The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) are to embark on a nationwide strike starting on Thursday January 27, as a way of registering their displeasure over government’s initial plans to remove fuel subsidies.
Faced with a serious budget crisis, the government had initially proposed to abolish these decried subsidies, which siphon billions of dollars from public coffers every year but allow gas stations to sell gasoline at prices far below the market.
In December 2021, the two organisations (NLC and TUC ) announced nationwide protests against the increase of petrol pump prices.
Although the federal government seems to be reversing, or at least postponing, the plans to remove fuel subsidy, an extremely popular measure in Africa’s most populous country the trade unions appear to want to exercise their democratic rights.
This is a highly sensitive and potentially explosive issue: Nigerian consumers consider access to cheap fuel to be one of the few privileges they enjoy from their poverty-stricken oil power.
Urging the NLC and TUC to call off the protests, Senate President Ahmad Lawan on January 24 said that the federal government was reconsidering the removal of the subsidy.