9th September, 2025
PRESS RELEASE:
LOOMING STRIKE IN OIL SECTOR: MURIC
BERATES UNIONS
Crisis looms in Nigeria’s oil sector as the Nigeria Union of
Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) threatens to go on strike over a
disagreement with Dangote Refinery on the participation of Dangote workers in
the petroleum body.
However, a faith-based human rights group, the Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC), has urged the unions to key into Dangote’s vision of reduced
hardship for Nigerians through low price of petrol.
This was contained in a statement issued on Tuesday, 9th
September, 2025 by the Founder and Executive Director of the Islamic civil
liberties organization, Professor Ishaq Akintola.
The statement reads:
“The Nigeria Union
of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) has threatened to go on
strike over a disagreement with Dangote Refinery on the participation of
Dangote workers in the petroleum body. Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association
of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) is also in alliance with NUPENG on the issue (https://punchng.com/dangote-vs-nupeng-union-insists-on-strike-meets-fg-others-today/).
“MURIC calls on the unions to soft-pedal. This is not the
best time to go on strike. Nigeria is just coming out of the woods as a result
of the economic reforms of the Tinubu administration. A strike in the oil
sector at this point in time can derail the reforms and take us back to the
dark days of fuel shortages.
“We have seen the good effect of the emergence of
a local private refinery in the last few months. We saw how one litre of petrol
which used to cost N1,300 after the removal of subsidy came down drastically. It
is now N860 or N900 depending on location after Dangote refinery came to the
rescue.
“We appeal to the unions to allow Nigerians enjoy
the full benefits of a local refinery that is already being celebrated all over
the world. Ethiopia and Dangote Refinery recently signed a $2.5 billion deal to
build a massive fertilizer plant in Ethiopia (https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/nigerias-dangote-ethiopia-build-25-billion-fertiliser-plant-2025-08-28/).
The United States imported over two million barrels of Dangote’s jet fuel in
March 2025 (https://theelectricityhub.com/dangote-refinery-gains-global-recognition-as-u-s-imports-over-2m-barrels-of-jet-fuel/).
“MURIC subscribes to the core principle of utilitarianism
which is the greatest happiness to the greatest number of people. We therefore urge the unions to key into Dangote’s vision
of reduced hardship for Nigerians through low price of petrol. This can only be
facilitated if the unions cooperate in the area of diminished middlemen’s
intervention. It can still be done without breaking the rules of the
International Labour Organisation (ILO).
“We appeal to the Federal Government (FG) to protect
Dangote Refinery from this calculated attempt to blackmail it. Unionism often
leads to oligarchic dictatorship which benefits only a few union leaders, their
puppets and their court jesters leaving the hoi polloi at the receiving end. FG
stands to gain if the price of petrol is drastically reduced as this will boost
the gains of its economic reform.
“Nigeria needs every hand on deck as things stand. With
a GDP growth of 3.13% in the first quarter of 2025 which is higher than the
2.27% in the same period in 2024 and the inflation rate reduced to 21.88 in
July 2025 compared to the scary economic outlook in 2023 and 2024, FG cannot
afford to relent on these gains by allowing aggressive unionism to scuttle the
gains.
“Besides, the action of these unions is capable of
discouraging investors who have already started showing interest in
Nigeria. For instance, Brazil has indicated strong interest.
“Other countries which have shown interest in
investing here include China, Saudi Arabia, Mauritius, the United Arab
Emirates, the United States, the United Kingdom and the Republic of South
Africa. FG must not leave foreign investors to the hawks in the garb of
unionism. FG must do everything necessary to avoid another round of fuel
shortages. This is the time to show prospective foreign investors that their
investments will be protected. But Dangote must be protected first because
charity, they say, begins at home.
“We remind Nigerians
that Dangote’s policy of reduced middlemen’s influence will keep prices down. Subsidy
thieves of those days can be compared to petroleum middlemen of today. They
both make prices go higher.
“The unions are accusing Dangote Refinery of monopoly and
enslavement, but what Nigerians see is economic emancipation and reduction in
the prices of petroleum products.
“We therefore urge traditional
rulers, opinion leaders and all men of goodwill to persuade both NUPENG and
PENGASSAN to let Dangote and the Nigerian people breathe.”
#DangoteRefinery
#NupengPengassan
#LetDangoteNigeriansBreathe
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Founder/Executive Director,
Muslim
Rights Concern (MURIC)