BREAKING: 20 Nigerian Governors Under Fire Over N70k Minimum Wage

0

FCT, Abuja – Haruna Kankara, the national president of the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE), has said about 20 states have yet to implement the N70,000 new minimum wage for primary school teachers and local government workers.

As reported by The Punch on Monday, April 7, the states include Yobe, Ebonyi, Cross River, Gombe, Zamfara, Kaduna, Imo, federal capital territory (FCT) Abuja, Borno, and 11 others.

Giving an update on the implementation of the national minimum wage act, Kankara said:

“We truly have the challenge of so many states, like about 20 that have not started implementing the new minimum wage.

“We have states like Sokoto, Yobe, Gombe, Zamfara, Kaduna, Imo, Ebonyi, Borno, Cross Rivers, FCT Abuja, among others. Some have started paying the state workers leaving out the local government workers and primary school teachers but we have continued to engage and plead with them to do the needful for these workers.

“Some of them promised but failed to fulfill their promise but we are hoping that just very soon all of these would have been resolved.”

The list of some states yet to implement the N70,000 new minimum wage for primary school teachers and local government workers can be found below:

Yobe
Ebonyi
Cross River
Gombe
Zamfara
Kaduna
Imo
Borno
‘LGs can pay N70k minimum wages’

Meanwhile, Olajumoke Shaqiru Victor, the lawmaker representing Ward 13 at the Abeokuta South local government in Ogun state, expressed optimism that the 774 local governments in Nigeria should be able to pay the N70,000 minimum wage once they start receiving their allocation from the federal account directly.

Victor expressed the view while speaking in an exclusive interview with Legit.ng. He maintained that the local government’s internally generated revenue would boost the resources of the council to enable them to pay the minimum wage.

The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain expressed the belief that the local governments in Nigeria would be able to pay the new minimum wage if they got their allocations from the federal government, coupled with the revenue they generated.

Minimum wage: Obasanjo talks down N70K pay

Earlier, Legit.ng reported that former President Olusegun Obasanjo criticised the N70,000 new minimum wage approved for workers by President Bola Tinubu.

Obasanjo described the new minimum pay as grossly inadequate to cover workers’ basic needs, including transportation, food, and housing.

In Chapter 17 of his newly-released book, Obasanjo accused labour leaders of betraying workers by allegedly prioritising personal interests over collective welfare.