7th June,
2023
PRESS RELEASE:
SUBSIDY
INTERVENTION : REDUCE WORKDAYS TO FOUR – MURIC
As the Federal Government (FG) contemplates the
introduction of intervention to cushion the effect of the removal of subsidy in
the oil sector, a human rights group, the Muslim rights Concern (MURIC), has
suggested that workdays should be reduced to four throughout Nigeria.
The suggestion was made on Wednesday, 7th
June, 2023 by Professor Ishaq Akintola, the Executive Director of MURIC.
He said :
“The Federal Government (FG) recently removed
subsidy in the oil sector. This has started a bandwagon effect on the lives of
Nigerians in different ways particularly transportation. Transport fares have
skyrocketed to unbearable levels in all parts of the country leading to a
situation where workers and other commuters get stranded midway.
“The Muslim
Rights Concern is deeply concerned about the plight of poor Nigerians who are
getting stranded on the way due to rise in transport fare. We are particularly
worried about the fate of students in primary, secondary and tertiary
institutions whose pocket money and allowances are fast drying up and those
whose pocket monies cannot take them home.
“Our leaders must look for quick solutions
before the economy collapses. An unusual situation demands an uncommon way out.
All of us must start thinking outside the box in view of the situation on
ground.
“As our honest
and sincere contribution to the search for interventions and palliatives, MURIC
suggests that FG should reduce workdays from five to four. This will make Nigeria’s
workdays start from Monday to Thursday if this policy is adopted.
“The advantages are numerous. Workers and
students will spend less on transportation, students will have more time for
their home assignments while hours of rest will increase for all. It will
improve the health condition for all and sundry. A healthy nation, they say, is
a wealthy nation.
“This template
has been tried in Kaduna State and it is still working well. It has brought
happiness to both workers and students in the state since it was introduced
three years ago (https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/497955-kaduna-begins-four-day-working-week.html?tztc=1).
“The latest
model is that of Kwara State where the state government introduced a three-day
work week two days ago (https://guardian.ng/news/kwara-government-reduces-workdays-to-three-times-a-week-for-state-public-servants/).
“State governments may pick their own
preferences: whether to work for three days in a week or four days. It depends
on the stamina of the workforce and the extent to which state governments can
control the cost of transportation.
“As we draw the curtain, we reiterate our
iron-cast support for the removal of oil subsidy. Although he was not the one
who removed subsidy directly, we give kudos to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for his
boldness and consistency on the issue. We need leaders like this who will walk
their talks.”
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Executive Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC).
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