The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), has condemned the disruption of the peaceful protest by members of the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU) and the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU), by security operatives, preventing the union’s from protesting their withheld salaries.
After mobilising members to the Unity fountain, the venue for convergence and a pre-departure briefing with newsmen, a mild drama however occurred when the police used their bulletproof armoured tank to block the entrance of the fountain to prevent the aggrieved non-academic workers from proceeding on a peaceful March to the ministries of Education, and Labour and Employment, to drop off letters.
The planned demonstration, organized by the Joint Action Committee of both unions and led by the President of SSANU, Mohammed Aruna Ibrahim and General Secretary of NASU, Comrade Peters Adeyemi on Thursday in Abuja, was aimed at addressing the Federal government’s failure to pay their members’ salaries for the past four months.
Efforts by the protesters to negotiate their exit were unsuccessful until leaders engaged with Department of State Security (DSS) personnel who eventually allowed a select group to proceed by vehicle to deliver protest letters to the ministries.
The NLC in a statement signed by its Head of Information and Public Affairs, Benson Upah, advised the government to tread carefully in order not to court a major national protest beyond its control, even as it demanded an unreserved apology from the police to NASU and SSANU for violating their rights.
The statement reads: “The FCT Police Command Commissioner, Compol Bennett Igweh deservedly earned our outrage and contempt by violently breaking up a peaceful protest at Unity Fountain on Thursday, July 18, 2024, by members of two of our affiliates, NASU and SSANU.
“Compol Igweh caused to be deployed to the venue of the protest, armoured tanks, assault dogs and police personnel in battle gear who broke up the peaceful protest using excessive force and other hostile means.
“The behaviour of the police is an affront to the 1999 constitution (as amended), ILO Conventions 87 and 98 and African Charter on People and Human Rights which guarantee freedom of association and speech; a violation of the Supreme Court ruling that citizens do not need the permit or approval of the police to peacefully protest and an insult to the dignity of self-respecting and law-abiding citizens.
“We need to let the powers that be, especially Compol Igweh and those who sent him that we are not in a Police State and if his intentions are to scare and intimidate workers protesting under the law, then they have picked on the wrong customers.
“We fought for this democracy and we will not fold our hands and allow intestinal-minded people to destroy it.
“We are concerned that officers like Compol Igweh who should be inspiring a new generation of officers away from the colonial traditions of policing are the ones leading the charge into the abyss.
“We want to assure him and his ilks that no one will bestow on him a medal for his unprofessional and disgusting behaviour. However, in the event he finds himself as one of the beneficiaries of this new bizarre bazaar of self-bemedalling, we say ahead of time that it is not a medal to wear with honour.”
While criticising the actions of the FCT Police Command Commissioner, Compol Bennett Igweh against civil and law-abiding citizens, the NLC accused him of sleeping on duty and allowing criminals to take over the city
“Under Compol Igweh’s watch, FCT has been crawling with bandits, criminals and crooks (both in low and high places) even in the heart of the city. Life has never been this frightening for law-abiding citizens. Instead of training the turrets of his armoured tanks on these social misfits, it is peaceful workers who are his victims.
“Igweh does not need to go far for a refresher course on safe-guarding FCT. One of his predecessors who is now a DIG (who rid Abuja of crime and still related well with citizens) is only an ear-shot away at Louis Edet House.
“The reason for the peaceful protest by NASU and SSANU is very much in the public domain non-payment of their four-months withheld salaries after workers in other unions were paid for the same strike action.
“The two unions had exhausted all means lawful over a long stretch of time including a warning strike as a means for getting their salaries paid.
“But clearly, the government took their maturity and patience for granted. What the government failed to realise was that it was not only imperilling the tranquillity in the university education environment, it was acting in violation of the constitution which says no citizen should be discriminated against!
“If the government and the police are proud lawbreakers, what moral justification do they have to expect others to be of good behaviour?
“In light of this, we demand an immediate police apology to NASU and SSANU members whom they violated.
“We also demand the immediate payment of the withheld salaries. We had had cause to write to the government as well as issued a press statement on this matter in the recent past.
“Government will be courting a major national industrial protest if it continues to ignore our wise counsel.”