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June 16 uprising: how a massacre in South Africa led to Africa’s boycott of the 1976 Olympics

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By Nicolas Bancel, Université de Lausanne

AS the world prepares for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, can we maintain faith in the nonpolitical ethos of the event? The Montreal Olympics Games in 1976 stands out, among others, as a clear instance of the games being used for political ends.

In 1976 Montreal became only the second French-speaking city to host the event since Paris in 1924 and security issues were high on the agenda. Just four years earlier the Munich games had witnessed the tragedy of the execution of the Israeli delegation by the Palestinian Black September commando.

But apart from the withdrawal of Taiwan under pressure from China, geopolitical issues in 1976 seemed to focus on the cold war and its sporting metaphor: the Olympic competition between the US and the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics). With just a week to go before the opening of the games, no one could have imagined the shocking event that was about to unfold at the Montreal Olympics: a landmark boycott of the event by African countries. It was to have global resonance.

As a historian and researcher, I have co-edited several books and devoted a number of works to the history of the Olympic Games. I use the example of Montreal in 1976 to explain how the event has often served as a political platform – and how it bolstered Africa’s international voice in 1976.

An African geopolitical force emerges

When it was founded in 1963, the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) – later the African Union – was composed of 32 African countries. It aimed to achieve two main goals. One was the decolonisation of the last African territories under western colonial control. The second was the overthrow of the white minority apartheid regimes in South Africa and Rhodesia (today Zimbabwe).

The composition of the International Olympic Committee had been turned upside down by the entry of newly independent African countries. The shift disrupted cold war dynamics and, under pressure from representatives of the newly independent nations and communist countries, South Africa was excluded from the Olympics from 1964. Rhodesia followed in 1972.

The same upheaval occurred at the United Nations (UN), where pressure on South Africa increased following the decolonisation of African and Asian countries in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1962, for example, the International Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination was adopted, clearly targeting South Africa. In 1968, the UN assembly requested that all states cease cultural, educational or sporting exchanges with the “racist regime of South Africa”. However, this international pressure was countered by the right of veto or abstention of certain western countries, notably the US. It had no binding force.

In 1974 and 1975, the last Portuguese colonies (Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique and São Tomé) became independent. From that point, the OAU’s primary political objective shifted to combating apartheid. Despite the organisation’s calls for a boycott of South Africa and the action of its members within the UN special committee on apartheid South Africa, the OAU’s concrete influence in isolating South Africa was weak, reflecting its geopolitical role on a global scale.

In 1975, the report of the UN special committee again emphasised the fight against countries that continued to maintain links with South Africa and Rhodesia, particularly sporting links.

A massive boycott

Against this backdrop, in 1976, the OAU orchestrated a request for the exclusion of New Zealand from the Montreal Olympics. The grounds were that New Zealand had authorised its 1976 rugby team to tour South Africa against an all-white home team. The threat of a boycott by African countries piled pressure on the International Olympic Committee.

One event catalysed the OAU’s reaction: the Soweto massacre in Johannesburg. On 16 June 1976, a demonstration by schoolchildren turned into a riot. Brutal police violence led to the death of 600 demonstrators and the arrest of tens of thousands, mainly black people.

From 24 June to 3 July, the OAU convened in Port Louis, Mauritius for its 27th ordinary session of the Council of Ministers. The reaction was vehement: in addition to condemning the massacre, the OAU called for armed resistance against the South African regime and supported supplying weapons to the liberation movements. One resolution targeted New Zealand, urging the International Olympic Committee to exclude the country from the 1976 games. With the Olympics set to begin in just two days, on 15 July, many African delegations were already in Montreal.

The African states’ decision disrupted the sporting movement just as complex negotiations about New Zealand’s participation were underway. The failure of these negotiations led to a boycott by 22 African countries. Two countries, loyal allies of France, refused to take part: Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal. The decision to boycott came as a shock to the sporting world. The OAU had entirely bypassed the input of African delegates to the International Olympic Committee and their National Olympic Committees. This again shifted the focus of the games from pure athletic competition to a powerful political condemnation of South Africa’s regime and those who tolerated it.

Media wise and politically, the OAU’s actions, by using the Olympics as a platform, successfully dominated the headlines. The boycott helped force the world to confront apartheid. The global press had no choice but to focus on the issue.

What happened next

The consequences of the Olympic boycott by African countries were significant. Africa asserted itself as an autonomous power in the field of international sports diplomacy. This compensated for the relative ineffectiveness of the OAU within the UN, particularly in advocating for sanctions against South Africa.

The International Olympic Committee also revealed its powerlessness and conservatism throughout the crisis. It maintained its independence by maintaining its stance, contending that rugby was not an Olympic sport and that New Zealand’s sporting policy was outside its purview. But it was powerless as the boycott was ultimately successful. Its conservative position went against a rising tide of protest against apartheid.

The OAU’s fight against complicity with apartheid had both a moral and a geopolitical dimension. Morally, apartheid represented a radical form of the old colonial domination. Geopolitically, the OAU’s “pan-African” coherence was also based on this struggle.

The boycott of the Montreal Olympics revealed the complexity of international sporting relations, which went far beyond the east-west confrontation. It was a sign of the OAU’s efforts to build a genuine African force on the world stage. The sports aside, the 1976 Olympics were indeed a global political stage.The Conversation

Nicolas Bancel, Professeur ordinaire à l’université de Lausanne (Unil), chercheur au Centre d’histoire internationale et d’études politiques de la mondialisation (Unil), co-directeur du Groupe de recherche Achac., Université de Lausanne

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Nigeria loses over N16bn revenue daily from crude oil as production drops

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THE Nigerian government has lost over N16 billion in revenue daily from crude oil production amounting to N1.62 trillion between January and May this year as oil production volume dropped rapidly.

This development portends that Nigeria could struggle to meet its annual budget funding which is largely hinged on oil revenue resources, an analysis by The ICIR has shown.

At the start of the year, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu had signed into law an N28.7 trillion budget for the fiscal year, breakdown into N8.76 trillion for recurrent expenditure, N9.99 trillion for capital expenditure, N8.27 trillion for debt servicing and N1.7 trillion for statutory transfers.

The government projected over N15 trillion in revenue, anticipating to fund the budget with over 70 percent revenues from crude oil production.

However, there are worries that the revenue projection is at risk should oil production remain 27.0 per cent below its budgetary provisions.

Analysis by The ICIR shows that crude oil production dropped significantly in the review months, resulting in a daily loss of N16.05 billion and amounting to N1.62 trillion.

In its 2024 budget, the federal government set the crude oil production benchmark, including condensate, at 1.7 million barrels per day (bpd) and based the crude oil benchmark at $77.97 per barrel and exchange rate at N800 to one dollar.

With the 1.7 million bpd and $77.97 benchmark rate, the country will earn $132.55 million or N106.04 revenue daily.

However, according to the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) monthly statistics, Nigeria’s crude oil production fell sharply between January and May 2024.

The data shows that the country’s crude oil production volume dropped consecutively from  1.43 million bpd crude in January to 1.32 million bpd in February to 1.23 million bpd in March to 1.28 million bpd in April and to 1.25 million bpd in May.

This averaged 1.3 million bpd production in the review months and fell short of the 1.7 million bpd benchmarked in the 2024 budget.

Additional information from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) website shows that crude oil production prices averaged $86.53 and crude oil traded for 101 days in the five months under review.

With an average daily crude oil production of 1.3 million bpd at $86.53 price, Nigeria earned   $112.49 million or N89.99 billion‬ in revenue as against the $132.55 million or N106.04 budget benchmark, resulting in a loss of $20.06 million or N16.05 billion daily.

This indicates that Nigeria lost $20.06 million or N16.05 billion daily revenue loss in 101 days, amounting to $2.03 billion or N1.62 trillion between January and May this year.

While it could be considered that Nigeria is taking consolation in crude oil prices increasing above the $77.97 per barrel budgeted benchmark, however, the declining crude oil production means reduced earnings from oil sales as the country seeks to boost its revenue base.

Early this month, OPEC and its allies (OPEC+) at its Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMCC) meeting pegged Nigeria’s crude oil production quota at 1.5 million barrels for 2025 despite the country targeting a two million bpd crude oil production.

In a report, ‘Accelerated Stabilisation and Advancement Plan (ASAP)’ presented to President Tinubu, the minister of finance and coordinating minister of the economy, Wale Edun, expressed worries over Nigeria’s dwindling crude oil revenue.

He said, “Our ability to achieve the 2024 Budgeted revenue step-up of 77.4 per cent from 2023 actual is at risk should oil production remain 27.0 per cent below budget. Fifty per cent of the annualised YTD (year-to-date) variance suggests a lower-than-budgeted revenue of N15.7 trillion at the current run rate.”

A development economist, Kalu Aja told The ICIR that Nigeria needs to guard its oil revenue with extra commitment since it is the major source of its foreign exchange earnings and buffer for the foreign reserve.

“The oil resources must be protected at all costs.  It is still our major revenue-earning source. We are having foreign exchange problems and mainly because we don’t have enough supply for the dollar  for the currency market,”Kalu said.

CBN’s increasing interest rate not enough to curb inflation – World Bank

THE World Bank has said that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) might not effectively curb inflation by hiking the monetary policy rate (MPR)-known as the benchmark interest rate,adding that it poses a risk to economic growth.

It expressed the doubt in its ‘Global Economic Prospects‘ report released on Wednesday, June 12.

“Risks to Nigeria’s growth outlook are substantial, including the possibility that the tightening of monetary policy stops short of reining in inflation,” World Bank, a member of the Bretton Woods financial institutions, stated.

According to the World Bank, the failure of the CBN tightening policies to rein in inflation is one of the significant risks to Nigeria’s economic growth.

It stressed that the CBN increasing rate measures might not address the inflation issue which has significantly challenged the country’s economy.

The CBN aggressively raised the MPR known  by 750 basis points to 26.25 per cent in May since the beginning of the year to react to surging inflation which has risen to 33.7 per cent as of April.

Financial experts believe that the headline inflation will rise further in May. In its June Commodity Update report, the Financial Derivatives Company Limited projects inflation will increase by 0.63 percent to 34.32 percent in May.

In the Global Economic Prospects report, the World Bank predicted that Nigeria’s economic growth would remain modest at 3.3 percent in 2024 and 3.5 percent in 2025.

It stated that the non-oil economy is expected to experience sustained growth, while the oil sector is expected to stabilize as production recovers.

The World Bank also highlighted the issue of public debt in sub-Saharan Africa, which is expected to remain elevated over the forecast period.

“If global interest rates remain high, debt-service costs for countries in the region may rise, increasing the risk of government debt distress,” it stated.

The ICIR reported that Nigeria’s headline inflation rate rose to 33.69 percent in April for the 11th consecutive since President Bola Tinubu assumed office in May 2023.

The inflation rate was 0.49 per cent higher than in March when it surpassed the highest record since 1999.

Sallah: Police ban durbar in Kano

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THE Kano State Police Command has banned durbar activities in the state as the Muslim faithful celebrate Eid-El-Kabir this weekend. 

A statement issued on Thursday, June 13, by the state commissioner of police, Usaini Gumel, stated that the ban became necessary to sustain peace in the state.

According to reports, the deposed emir of the Kano emirate, Aminu Ado Bayero, had on June 10, invited district heads for the forthcoming durbar, which Muslims often celebrate after every eid.

The announcement was contained in a circular signed by a senior councillor of the emirate,  Abbas Sanusi, Galadiman Kano.

The circular directed all the district heads of the emirate to come along with their village heads, horse riders, and praise singers.

The circular also noted that local government chairmen had been notified of the development to facilitate the smooth transportation of the district heads into the Kano metropolis.

The ICIR reports that the durbar festival is usually held twice yearly in Kano and some other ancient towns in Northern Nigeria, to mark the Eid-el-Fitr and Eid-el-Kabir celebrations.

It is a colourful event that often lasts for three or four days, with the festival characterised by processions through the city, led by the emir, a key player in the event.

The emir leads about five processions throughout the festival.

However, in a statement on Thursday, the police said such activity would not be allowed in the interest of peace.

“The Kano State Police Command congratulates Muslim faithful and all law-abiding residents of the state for witnessing yet another Eid-El-Kabir Sallah period and assures that adequate security deployments have been put in place to ensure no breakdown of law and order in all parts of the state before, during and after the festive period.”

“This is part of the commitment to the sustenance of the peace by the Kano State Police Command in conjunction with all the relevant security stakeholders. In furtherance, a ban has been placed on all durbar activities throughout the State for the upcoming Eid-El-Kabir celebrations. This measure is taken as a result of a series of security reports obtained and wide consultations made with relevant security stakeholders to ensure the safety of the larger community,” the statement read.

The police, however, advised the faithful to conduct their normal Eid prayers at the various designated Eid praying grounds as done in the past.

“On a final note, the Command encourages continued collaboration and cooperation from all stakeholders to collectively work together to build a safer and more secure environment. The Command also urges everyone to keep reporting any suspicious movement of person(s) or item(s) they come across to the nearest police station,” the statement added.

The ICIR reported that the current emirship crisis in Kano has made many residents wonder which of the two embattled emirs will lead the Durbar festival.

This was a result of the amended law abolishing the existing five emirates and restoring the single emirate system in the state.

By implication, all the five emirs ruling at the time of the amendment were dethroned, and the state government reinstated Lamido Sanusi, deposed by the previous administration, led by the current national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Abdullahi Ganduje.

Sanusi’s reinstatement threw the state into confusion as the dethroned Emir Bayero refused to relinquish his office.

The matter has been pending in court, as both the state High Court and a Federal High Court in the state have issued conflicting orders on the matter.

The impasse has remained unresolved nearly four weeks after.

Minimum wage: we will pay what we can afford, Tinubu says

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PRESIDENT Bola Tinubu has said his administration would only pay what it could afford as minimum wage.

Tinubu reportedly said this during the 25th Democracy Day Dinner at the State House Conference Centre in Abuja on Wednesday, June 12.

He told the leadership of the National Assembly, who were present at the dinner, that an executive bill would sent to the lawmakers soon.

“Senate President, Deputy Senate President, you’ll get a notice on the minimum wage. We’re going to do it; what Nigeria can afford, what you can afford, what I can afford. They ask you to cut your coat according to your size if you have size at all”, Tinubu said.

Earlier on Wednesday, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, urged organised labour in Nigeria to accept a sustainable minimum wage proposed by the federal government.

He urged the labour unions to accept a realistic wage system which would not undermine the economy or lead to mass retrenchment of workers.

Labour unions in Nigeria are demanding an increase in workers’ minimum wage, citing economic hardships.

While the workers initially demanded N615,000, the Nigerian government offered N46,000 at first before increasing it to N60,000, which the workers rejected.

Both parties failed to reach a consensus during negotiations in May, and labour declared an indefinite strike on Monday, June 3, during which the nation’s power supply was cut off and the country, thrown into darkness.

Schools, airports, and train stations, among others, were also shut down.

The strike was suspended, however, on the second day after a meeting between both parties.

While the government increased its offer to N62,000, there has been no official agreement as this offer has again been rejected by the workers who now demand N250,000.

Why we support accountability initiatives in Nigeria – MacArthur Foundation

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THE director of the MacArthur Foundation in Nigeria, Kole Shettima, said the foundation’s push for public accountability in the country aims to improve the living standards of the general populace.

Shettima stated this at the project report dissemination meeting on “Tackling Corruption on Air and on Social Media Platforms” organised by the Progressive Impact Organisation for Community Development (PRIMORG), in Abuja, on Wednesday, June 13.

The project funded by the MacArthur Foundation focused on galvanising the citizens and government to embrace accountability, transparency, and participation to achieve good governance.


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In his speech, Shettima restated the foundation’s commitment to public accountability and democracy in Nigeria by ensuring that adequate resources are provided for civil society and media organisations. 

“Accountability journalism needs to be supported because some of these reports can take several months and a number of collaborations. We know that media organisations on their own may not have such resources.

“That is why we think that giving them additional resources to do what they actually do is one way to make sure that our country is much better,” he said.

The project tracked constituency projects in the North-Central region of the country. The report disclosed that PRIMORG produced 123 live radio programmes and syndicated 369 episodes and another 492 repeat broadcasts by five radio stations in Abuja, FCT;  Lokoja, Kogi; Keffi,Nasarawa; Ilorin, Kwara;  and Jos, Plateau State.

Participants at the project report dissemination meeting organised by PRIMORG

Describing the impact as “collective,” the executive director of PRIMORG, Augustine Agbonsuremi, said the organisation benefited from the vast resources of several media houses and organisations “made possible only by enthusiastic spirits around the grantees of the MacArthur Foundation.”

Agbonsuremi  said; “The Foundation’s support for this project was not only in direct funding but also in training, guidance and exposure to local and international opportunities for skills and resources”

Speaking on the theme “The Challenges of Corruption and Integrity Deficit in Nigeria 2021-2024,” the keynote speaker, Magdalene Igbolo, a professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Abuja blamed poverty and the decline in moral values and virtues as causes of corruption in Nigeria.

In her recommendation, Igbolo called for attitudinal change and collaboration among various groups in the country.

“Most importantly, integrity is what you do when nobody can see you,” she added.

 

 

Alleged N80bn fraud: Why we are yet to arrest Yahaya Bello – EFCC

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THE Regional Director of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in Benin, Edo State, Effa Okim, has given reasons why the agency is yet to arrest former Kogi State governor, Yahaya Bello, months after declaring him wanted.

He said the EFCC had been unable to arrest Bello due to the protection he is receiving from certain people.

However, he did not disclose the name of the persons allegedly protecting the former governor.

Okim said this on Wednesday, June 12, at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Delta State Council while fielding questions from journalists on why the EFCC had yet to arrest Bello weeks after he was declared wanted.

“That politically-exposed Yahaya Bello, whose crime has been traced to him by allegation and has been invited by EFCC to come and explain, and for months he is acting drama; we are all here wanting to ask questions. The shame is our own shame! “Can’t we catch him? We can, but do we go all out to catch him? Do we need to do that when he has his masters? Can’t they call him and tell him, ‘You are disgracing Nigeria’? What are you telling the world?

“Tell him to go and explain himself like others have done. Where are the ministers? Where are Yahaya Bello’s colleagues, even in his hiding? So, Nigerians can’t tell him ‘This is not fair, go and report; they are not going to kill you’. But people are still eating and dining with him,” an enraged Okim stated.

According to Okim, Bello, who is accused of N80.2 billion fraud, has ridiculed the Nigerian justice system by failing to present himself for trial in court.

The  EFCC declared Bello wanted in April and requested anybody with information on his whereabouts to report to the commission or the nearest police station.

This came a few hours after the commission told the Federal High Court in Abuja that it would do everything possible to arrest and prosecute him.

The ICIR reported that a Federal High Court in Abuja on May 10 refused to revoke the arrest warrant on Bello over the corruption case.

 The High Court Judge Emeka Nwite gave the ruling after hearing an application by the EFCC that preliminary objections by the former governor should not be heard until he shows up to defend the 19-count charge against him.

The judge ruled in favour of the EFCC, stating that no application would be heard from Bello’s legal team until he appeared in court.

He held that the commission’s requests were “meritorious and granted as prayed.”

He described Bello’s refusal to appear in court as a deliberate attempt at frustrating the case.

Meanwhile, at the resumed hearing on Thursday, June 13, a new date of June 27 was fixed for hearing of the case.

Bello’s counsel, Adeola Adedipe, told the court that the EFCC lawyers approached the counsel for the defendant, Aliyu  Wahab, and informed him that the June 13 date would not be convenient for them to proceed and that Wahab had to agree for another date to be set.

 

Kano anti-graft agency arrests 2, summons 3 permanent secretaries over employment fraud

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THE Kano State Public Complaints and Anti-Corruption Commission has summoned three permanent secretaries for questioning regarding an alleged fraud involving the sale of employment forms in the state’s Office of the Head of Service.

This was as the anti-graft agency arrested two suspects in connection with the job racketeering.

The commission’s chairman, Muhuyi Rimin-Gado, while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria in Kano on Wednesday, June 13, ssid that investigation was ongoing to identify and prosecute those involved in the scam.

According to him, thousands of desperate job seekers have been affected by the fraud.

”Preliminary investigations have uncovered fraudulent activities at the office of the Head of Service, Civil Service Commission, Kano State Secondary Schools Board, and Health Service Management Board.

”The two suspects in custody are cooperating with the investigation, which has led to the shutdown of a fake employment portal.

”The commission is working to root out corruption and ensure justice is served in the employment fraud scandal that has defrauded thousands of job seekers,” Rimin-Gado said.

He also noted that the investigation aimed at uncovering and bringing to justice those responsible for the fraudulent sale of employment forms.

”The commission is working to prevent corruption and ensure that justice is served.

”The state government has mandated the commission to thoroughly investigate the matter and prosecute those found wanting,” Rimin-Gado said.

Nigeria, over the years, has been plagued with employment fraud and job racketeering, with many job seekers falling victim to scams promising employment in exchange for bribes or purchasing forms.

The ICIR, in August 2023, reported that the ad-hoc committee of the House of Representatives investigating alleged job racketeering and mismanagement of the Integration Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS) threatened to invoke its legislative power on ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) of government that have refused to appear before it and enforced compliance. 

The committee said it had sent hearing notices through major national dailies and the MDAs’ offices to appear before it between August 24 and 31.  

The affected ministries are supposed to appear before the committee within the stipulated dates.

The committee is requesting the MDAs to provide it with relevant information relating to recruitment in their agencies. 

But on August 9, about 35 out of 40 MDAs reportedly failed to appear before the committee. 

Gagdi said the committee would, in line with its mandate, engage with over 600 MDAs to unearth the extent of the rottenness in the federal civil service.

Also, the committee had, on Thursday, August 17, threatened to recommend sanctions to the executive arm of government on some erring personnel of the MDAs for flouting the provisions in their recruitment and staff placement.

In a related development, The ICIR on July 4 reported the plan by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) to probe directors of MDAs over 70,000 ghost workers

Go after ‘idle’ FX in private hands to strengthen naira, Dogara tells FG

A FORMER speaker of the Federal  House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, has called on the Federal government of Nigeria to go after idle foreign exchange (FX) funds in private hands to strengthen the naira.

Dogara, the speaker of the House of Reps between 2015 to 2019, made the call on Wednesday, June 12, at a programme, ‘The Platform Nigeria,’ organised by Covenant Nation Church to mark the 2024 Democracy Day, Channels reported.

He said, “The USD is not going away anytime soon. The challenge before the government is how to unlock and make the USD locked up in private vaults in Nigeria begin to chase the naira. That to me, is the commonsensical solution. I believe we have enough dollars in this country that we can unlock to make our economy work and crash the FX rate.”

The naira has more than tumbled in value in the last year, losing its value from about N460/$1 in May 2023 to about N1,500/$1 currently, depreciating by over 200 per cent.

The ICIR reports that Nigeria has devalued its currency twice since last year and the trouble with the naira worsened in June 2023 when the country’s central bank floated its FX market.

According to Dogara, the government must act fast to restore Nigerians’ loss of hope in the value of the naira.

The former Federal House of Representative speaker also urged the Federal government to make it a policy to sell crude oil in naira and not in dollars.

He said, “To achieve this, the government must demand that all Nigerian exports, including crude oil exports, be paid for in naira, just as we don’t pay for any import into Nigeria from any country in naira. It’s not too much to demand that.”

He suggested that security operatives could sniff around to fish out individuals hoarding dollars in their private vaults.

“Government through credible intelligence generated by security agencies ought or should know those individuals in Nigeria who have taken advantage of the system and they have idle USD stashed in their private vaults.

“No one who has taken advantage of the system should have the liberty to store in excess what his or her country desperately needs in other to lift millions of its people out of multidimensional poverty,” Dogara said.


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He lamented that the naira stands devalued at present, asserting that the most productive nations are not necessarily with the strongest currencies, citing China as an example.

He queried even why the CFA currency, used in eight West African countries and six Central African countries, seems immune from the volatility the naira faces.

“If the current downward spiral of the naira is not arrested, I fear that we may get to a point where we will have to ditch the naira altogether. May God forbid that,” Dogara decried.

No agreement on N62,00 minimum wage, NLC tells FG

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THE Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has said it has not reached any agreement with the Federal Government (FG) on the new national minimum wage.

The NLC criticised President Bola Tinubu’s declaration that an agreement had been reached, insisting that its demand for a new national minimum wage remained N250,000.

While addressing Nigerians on Wednesday, June 12, in a nationwide broadcast to mark Democracy Day, Tinubu said he would soon send a bill to the National Assembly on the new minimum wage.

He added that the federal government’s negotiation with organised labour was done in good faith and with open arms.

Responding to the President’s claim in a statement on Wednesday, the acting president of NLC, Adewale Adeyanju, declared that the tripartite committee set up by the government on the minimum wage reached no agreement at the time negotiations ended on Friday, June 7.

According to Adeyanju, workers’ demand remains N250,000 only, and labour has not been given any compelling reasons to change this position which it considers a great concession by Nigerian workers during the tripartite negotiation process.

The NLC stated that it was necessary to raise the issue for the President and Nigerians as it seemed that those who informed him of the conclusion of the tripartite negotiations had not adequately briefed him.

The statement partly reads, “We reiterate that Nigerian workers will find it extremely difficult to accept any national minimum wage figure that approaches the poverty line.” We cannot continue to live in such poverty while working.

“While the President may have accurately recounted parts of our democratic journey’s history, it is evident that he has been misinformed regarding the outcome of the wage negotiation process.

“The NLC would have expected that the advisers of the President would have told him that we neither reached any agreement with the federal government and the employers on the base figure for a national minimum wage nor on its other components.

The NLC said it was surprised by Tinubu’s submission over a purported agreement.

“There was none, and we must let the President, Nigerians and other national stakeholders understand this immediately to avoid a mix-up in the ongoing conversation around the national minimum wage. We have also not seen a copy of the document submitted to him and will not accept any doctored document,” the statement added.

The ICIR reported on Wednesday that Tinubu assured Nigerians that he would submit a new minimum wage bill to the National Assembly soon. 

He gave the assurance during his address commemorating the June 12 Democracy Day celebrations on Wednesday morning.

In his speech, Tinubu acknowledged the hardships faced by most Nigerians, stating that the bill would make the agreed terms part of the nation’s law for the next five years or less.

The President’s promise came amid growing demands from workers and Nigerians for an increased minimum wage to address inflation and the rising cost of living. 

Although the government’s proposal of N62,000 represents about a 100 per cent increase from the current minimum wage of N30,000, organised labour has demanded a much higher figure, pegging its earlier N615,000 demand to N250,000.

The workers embarked on a strike on Monday, June 3, and relaxed the action the following day, after the parties agreed on some terms.