Business
Rivers Assembly Assures Protesting …Vows To Resist Slave Labour Ibeto Workers
Deputy Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Hon. Dumnamene Deekor has assured protesting workers of Ibeto Cement Company in the state that their grievances would be looked into by the House.
He stated this recently when placard-carrying workers of the company went on protest to the State House of Assembly, stating their displeasure over what they termed “slave labour.”
While thanking the workers over the peaceful manner in which they comported themselves in presenting their grievances, Hon. Deekor, assured them that the state law makers will address their problem with the company.
“We (legislators) will not allow any investor to cause trouble in the State…We will use every legal instrument within our power to resist any form of slave labour in the state,” he said.
Earlier, Mr Ebenezer Chuayekien, the spokesman for the protesting workers, had briefed the Deputy Speaker that they were protesting against such act as working without condition of service and indiscriminate sacking of workers without payment of entitlements.
The spokesman also stated that workers were not paid medical allowance, even as “we inhale a lot of cement dust,” saying that this is contrary to what holds in other cement companies.
“We work for 11 hours in the morning, and 13 hours in the night without over time. Is this not the highest form of slavery? We are, therefore, demanding that the company pay entitlements to those it has laid off,” he continued.
Meanwhile, the workers also claimed that the State Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) scribe is instrumental to the sack of some of them and the company’s refusal to pay them their dues.
A case in point was the allegation that Prince Williams was used by the company to stop them from unionising.
On consultation, however, Williams denied the allegation, saying it is “a calculated attempt to drag my name through the mud.
“Howe could I be involved when I am neither a staff nor a consultant to the company,” he asked rhetorically.
Some of the placards carried by the workers bore such inscriptions as “Ibeto, stop enslaving Rivers indigenes,” “RSHA” save our souls,” “we need our benefits,” and “Addah Williams and Darrick are collaborators.”
Sogbeba Dokubo