The labour unions directed their state branches and affiliates in a warning letter jointly signed by NLC President, Joe Ajaero and his TUC counterpart, Festus Osifo, to mobilise their members in readiness for the picketing if the Federal Government and NERC fail to heed their warning.
Femi Falana, a human rights attorney, has supported the nationwide picketing of the offices of the Electricity Distribution Companies and the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission due to the increase in electricity rates.
According to the senior attorney, the suggested course of action is appropriate and covered by Nigeria’s Labour Act.
Falana made this claim in an interview that aired on Sunday Politics on Channels Television.
Remember that NERC was given a deadline of May 12 to undo the increase in electricity pricing to N65/kwh by organized labor under the auspices of the Nigeria Labour Congress and Trade Union Congress, failing which it risked having its commission and DISCO offices across the country picketed.
The labour unions directed their state branches and affiliates in a warning letter jointly signed by NLC President, Joe Ajaero and his TUC counterpart, Festus Osifo, to mobilise their members in readiness for the picketing if the Federal Government and NERC fail to heed their warning.
According to Falana, NERC failed to follow due process and did not engage the stakeholders before taking such an unpopular decision.
He said, “There is provision for picketing under the Labour Act in Nigeria and that is what the Labour centres will begin tomorrow. They are going to picket the headquarters of NERC and offices of the DISCOs to register their protest against the illegal increase in electricity tariff.
“This is because the Nigeria Electricity Regulation Commission did not follow due process and didn’t conduct a public hearing as required by the Electricity Act 2023. I hope the NERC will engage and discuss with the Labour movement and see what can be done to reverse the hike.
“Again, the increase was anchored on the assumption that there will be regular electricity supply for at least 20 hours. But that has not been the case. If DISCO cannot meet the electricity supply, people have no right to pay the increased tariff.”
He expressed concern that it would be unfair and insensitive of any government to supply darkness and expect its citizens to pay for electricity tariffs.
Falana said it is becoming obvious that privatisation has failed ‘woefully’ in Nigeria.
He said, “By virtue of Section 116 of the Electricity Act 2023, you can only justify a hike in tariff if you supply the electricity. There must be evidence that there is an improvement in electricity supply.
“But if Nigerians have to power their offices or business premises with generators in the face of epileptic electricity supply, it is difficult to justify.
“Again when they talk about unbundling, to the best of my knowledge, the majority of the DISCOs have been acquired by the government because of their toxic loans.
“As of the time, the DISCOs were distributed and sold in 2013. That sector has become self-sufficient. The government was no longer subsidizing the sector.
“So we must find out what happened between then and now. If the government is thinking of unbundling again, it must sit down with the workers and engage in consultation in the country.
“This is because privatisation has failed woefully in Nigeria. I think the Senate has once called on the government to take back all the DISCOs and take firm control.
“We cannot increase tariffs when the majority of our people are supplied with darkness. I am not even talking of those in Band B, C and D. We are only talking of Band A for now and there is no basis for such discrimination,” he said.