5th
June, 2023
PRESS RELEASE:
MURIC
TO NLC : YOUR PLANNED STRIKE IS POLITICALLY MOTIVATED
As the nation braces up for a general strike
called by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), an Islamic human rights
organisation, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), has declared that the proposed
strike is politically motivated. The group therefore called on NLC to change
its stance before it is fully exposed.
The declaration was made on Monday, 5th
June, 2023 by the Executive Director of MURIC, Professor Ishaq Akintola.
The group said :
“We are in possession of the video clip of a press
conference addressed by the National Publicity Secretary of a faction of the Labour
Party (LP), Abayomi Arabambi, in which he revealed that the same NLC and the Trades
Union Congress (TUC) had supported the party’s presidential candidate, Mr.
Peter Obi, when he pledged to remove oil subsidy if elected president.
“It
amounts to double standard for the same Peter Obi and his party to support the
workers’ union in its planned strike over oil subsidy. It smirks of high level
immorality, undisguised deceit and hypocrisy of the highest order. Peter Obi
had described oil subsidy as organised crime during the campaigns. It has to
remain so. Obi’s sudden volte-face on oil subsidy is illogical. It is
inexplicable.
“Nigerians must open their eyes very wide to
be able to understand what is happening. The difference between LP as a
political party and the NLC which is a workers’ union is like the difference
between six and half a dozen. Peter Obi is trying to get through the bends what
it could not achieve through the straights. It is an attempt to hijack the
workers’ union for a personal ambition.
“NLC has lost its
credibility by opposing the withdrawal of oil subsidy. We advise its president,
Joe Ajaero, to retrace his steps before it is too late. Nigerians know where the
shoe pinches them.
“Oil subsidy is a cancerous tumour in the nation’s
anatomy which must be removed before it destroys all parts of its body. No competent
surgeon will hesitate to amputate a rotten limb in order to save the rest of
the body. That rotten limb in the body of the Nigerian economy is oil subsidy. It
must go if the economy has to survive.
“We cannot continue
like this. We cannot allow the wolves among us who masquerade as oil marketers
to come under the guise of oil subsidy to arrogate all the milk and honey in
the land to themselves. The time to stop oil subsidy is now.
“We charge Nigerians
of all political divides to join hands with the new administration in ensuring
that oil subsidy is killed permanently. It must not be allowed to rise again.
“All other sectors
are suffering because of oil subsidy. The Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) revealed in February 2023 that oil subsidy now consumes N400
billion monthly (https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/582724-fuel-subsidy-now-above-n400bn-monthly-nnpcl.html).
That is a humongous amount of money that should have gone to education, health,
security, etc.
“Because of oil subsidy, 7,256 nurses trained by
Nigeria left for Britain in one year alone (https://punchng.com/7256-nigerian-nurses-left-for-uk-in-one-year-report/).
5,000 medical doctors also took the brain drain train to Britain within eight
years (https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/560511-brain-drain-over-5000-nigerian-doctors-move-to-uk-in-eight-years.html?tztc=1).
“As a result of this oil-subsidy-induced neglect of
the health sector, one million Nigerians are blind, 300,000 Nigerians die of
malaria annually, 30 million are hypertensive, four million suffer from
diabetes, 400,000 have tuberculosis, 32 million have river blindness, 130,000
die of pneumonia and 4,500 pregnant women die every year. Yet the calamities
are avoidable if we drop oil subsidy.
“Because of oil
subsidy, power and education sectors are in comatose and the subsidy cabal
smiles to the bank. 55 million Nigerians have no access to education. It is on
record that the education sector received a meagre N4.6 trillion in seven years
from 2016 to 2022.
“The percentages
of budgetary allocations to education from 2016 to 2022 were 7.6%, 6.1%, 7.1%,
8.4%, 6.5%, 5.7% and 5.4% in 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022
respectively. This was in spite of the recommendation of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) of 26% budgetary
allocation to education.
“Nigerians must
summon the courage to give subsidy thieves the fight of their lives. We cannot
wait for tomorrow to begin the struggle. Tomorrow will definitely be too late.
We must frontally confront the monster now. Oil subsidy must go and, like a
frightened dog, NLC must put its tail between its legs and run back to the
drawing board. This politically motivated plan to go on strike has failed.”
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Executive Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC).
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