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Workers Begin 3-Day Protest Over ‘Poor Welfare, Stalled Promotions’ In FCT

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Workers Begin 3-Day Protest

Workers Begin 3-Day Protest Over ‘Poor Welfare, Stalled Promotions’ In FCT

Workers begin 3-day protest over ‘poor welfare, stalled promotions’ in FCT. Workers under the Joint Union Action Committee (JUAC) have shut the gate of the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) secretariat in protest over poor welfare conditions.

Rifkatu Iortyer, the JUAC president, said the action was prompted by the non-payment of overheads since December 2024, lack of staff training, and stagnation in career progression.

She listed irregular salary payments, unresolved strikes by primary healthcare workers and teachers, and unpaid casual staff as additional grievances.

The JUAC president acknowledged Nyesom Wike, minister of the FCT, for initiating far-reaching reforms aimed at repositioning the administration.

She commended Wike for establishing the FCT civil service commission, which she said has opened the path for career advancement up to permanent secretary level.

However, Iortyer noted that workers’ welfare had deteriorated despite the reforms.

“We are protesting for so many things and we are not happy over a lot of things,” NAN quoted Iortyer as saying.

“We no longer go on training anymore; from December last year, there was no overhead to run the offices. We go from office to office to borrow paper to work.

“No promotion since clearing of the backlog the Wike-led administration met in August 2023. Since that time, there’s been no promotion, only appointments of permanent secretaries.”

The JUAC president also said casual workers in agencies like the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) have not been paid since December 2024.

“They may not be career civil servants but they are the ones that sweep the streets; they are the ones that attend to the cemetery; and they are the ones that attend to the mortuary,” she said.

“Yes, we don’t have casual workers in career civil service but we already have them and then you say you will not pay them?
“If the FCTA doesn’t want casual workers then it should absorb them because they are humans and have families to feed.”

Workers Begin 3-Day Protest

Workers Begin 3-Day Protest

While noting that primary education falls under the jurisdiction of area councils, the JUAC president asked Wike to intervene in the lingering teachers’ strike.

She said the protest would continue for three days, after which workers would reconvene to decide on their next steps if no action is taken.

Abuja

FCTA Confirms Antivenom Stock, Warns Negligent Hospitals, Gives Emergency Lines

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FCTA

FCTA Confirms Antivenom Stock, Warns Negligent Hospitals, Gives Emergency Lines

FCTA confirms antivenom stock, warns negligent hospitals, gives emergency lines. The FCTA said all public hFCTA confirms antivenom stock, warns negligent hospitals, gives emergency linesospitals have sufficient antivenom after singer Ifunanya Nwangene’s death at FMC Jabi. Dr. Adedolapo Fasawe warned facilities to follow protocols or face sanctions, stressing that early treatment is critical.

FCTA

FCTA

The territory has added 12 ambulances, improved ICUs, and centralized antivenom storage.

Residents are urged to use emergency lines 090157892931 or 090157892932.

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Abuja

FCT Police Warn NLC Against Planned Abuja Protest, Say Proscribed Groups Plot To Hijack

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FCT Police Warn NLC Against Planned Abuja Protest, Say Proscribed Groups Plot To Hijack

FCT Police warn NLC against planned Abuja protest, say proscribed groups plot to hijack. The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) police command has warned the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) against its planned protest scheduled for Tuesday in Abuja, the nation’s capital.

The NLC leadership had fixed February 3 for a solidarity rally along with members of the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria and the Joint Union Action Committee (JUAC) at the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) secretariat in Garki Area 11.

The NLC declared that the rally is to publicly affirm that “an injury to one is an injury to all”, adding that the Nigerian labour movement will not abandon its members.

On January 24, the labour body declared support for the indefinite strike by workers of the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA), describing the action as “necessary and heroic” in response to alleged violation of workers’ rights.

In a statement, Joe Ajaero, NLC president, said the labour union stood “in very strong solidarity” with FCTA workers under the aegis of JUAC.

Ajaero described the strike as “a necessary and heroic response to a vicious cocktail of neoliberal attacks, gross administrative impunity, and a systematic violation of the fundamental rights of workers by the FCTA management and its political leadership”.

However, in a statement on Monday, Josephine Adeh, FCT police spokesperson, said the command respects the constitutional right to peaceful assembly, but noted that intelligence reports indicate “plans by proscribed groups and other non-state actors to infiltrate and hijack the protest, posing a risk to public peace and safety”.

Adeh said in the interest of public safety, the organisers should consider rescheduling the protest to prevent any breakdown of law and order and to protect lives, property, and the rights of other residents.

Police

Police

“The Command remains committed to safeguarding all lawful activities and urges residents to continue cooperating with security agencies to keep the FCT peaceful and secure,” the statement reads.
Meanwhile, the national industrial court has reportedly issued an interim order restraining the NLC, TUC and JUAC from embarking on the planned protest.

The court had earlier ordered workers on the payroll of the FCT administration to suspend the strike.

Emmanuel Subilim, the presiding judge, held that although the matter before the court amounted to a trade dispute, the defendants’ right to embark on industrial action was not absolute.

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Abuja

Akwa Ibom Indigenes Protest RMAFC Meeting, Warn Against Tampering With State’s Oil Wells

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Akwa Ibom Indigenes Protest RMAFC Meeting

Akwa Ibom Indigenes Protest RMAFC Meeting, Warn Against Tampering With State’s Oil Wells

Akwa Ibom indigenes protest RMAFC meeting, warn against tampering with State’s Oil Wells. Akwa Ibom indigenes resident in Abuja on Tuesday stormed the venue of a meeting of the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC), where the Inter-Agency Technical Committee (IATC) on Disputed/New Oil Wells was sitting, to protest what they described as attempts to reopen a matter already settled by the Supreme Court.

The protesters cautioned that no individual or agency should tamper with Akwa Ibom State’s 76 oil wells, stressing that the ownership of the wells was conclusively determined in favour of the state by the Supreme Court in 2012.

They insisted that any move to revisit the issue through administrative or technical processes would amount to a disregard for the authority of the apex court and could undermine peace in the Niger Delta region.

Akwa Ibom State was formally represented at the IATC meeting by a high-powered delegation comprising leading legal practitioners, government officials and technocrats. Members of the delegation included Paul Usoro, SAN; Assam Assam, SAN; the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Uko Udom, SAN; Uwemedimo Nwoko, SAN; Emmanuel Enoidem, SAN; and a former Attorney-General of Akwa Ibom State.

Akwa Ibom Indigenes Protest RMAFC Meeting

Akwa Ibom Indigenes Protest RMAFC Meeting

Also on the state’s delegation were the Commissioner for Finance, Mr Emem Bob, Former Attorney General and Commissioner Justice, Barr. Ekpenyong Ntekim; the Commissioner for Information, Dr. Aniekan Umanah; Honourable Member representing Ikot Ekpene Federal Constituency, Dr Patrick Umoh, among others.

The delegation is expected to present Akwa Ibom State’s position before the committee, reiterating that the Supreme Court judgment remains final and binding, and urging all relevant federal agencies to respect and uphold the ruling.

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