Opinion
Matters Inconsequential
I have never regarded politics as the arena of morals. It is the arena of interests.
– British Labour Politician, Aneurin Bevan.
A week after the news filtered out, it still sounds curious to many Nigerians what the real motives are. But probably because Nigerian politics is enmeshed in delicate intricacies, it may take only Senator Heineken Lokpobiri and his co-travellers to interprete what appears to be an anti-Nigerian workers bill to some of us.
I can not agree less with Aneurin Bevan that politics is the arena of interests, and not arena of morals. This explains why the ruler would always want to exercise his power on the people at all cost, and the people in turn express their sentiments over government’s policies that affect their interests.
In an ideal democratic setting however, power resides in the people and not the rulers. The people cast the votes that give the ruler the right to rule. In building democracy therefore, the ruler must take into cognizance the fragile bricks of public sentiments and conflicting individual interests. He must know where the wind of public sentiments is blowing to. The non-recognition of this truth is perhaps the Achilles heel of Senator Lokpobiri’s bill.
It may be convenient for Senator Lokpobiri to argue that his bill is in defence of the rights of the Nigerian workers. But in a country where the more you look, the less you see, it will be inconceivable for any reasonable worker not to think that the bill seeks to muscle the conscience of the Nigerian citizenry to resist policies that are inimical to the well-being of the people; most especially in view of the recent anti-fuel subsidy removal protests that almost brought the country to its knee.
No doubt, Lokpobiri, like every other person in the legislative chamber, has the right and the mandate of the people he represents to make laws, good and bad. It is that right and mandate that give the legislature the power to regulate the behaviour of the larger society. But such rights and power become ignominious when they are stretched too far beyond the limit of public comprehension and acceptance. Just in case we have forgotten, and so often and easily we do forget, a ruler has the power to make a decision to which the citizen has the right to object. It is this understanding that makes democracy the irresistible system of government.
However, it would have been understandable if the bill that seeks to make it unlawful for the trade unions in Nigeria to embark on strike without obtaining the permission of the different organs of the union through a ballot is coming from the executive arm of government. But it is unimaginable and looks too curious that a legislator from an oil-rich, yet impoverished state, and whose job is to check the excesses of the executive, is the arrowhead of such a bill. The bill, coming from a Senator, to me and to any rational and discerning mind, smacks of curious motive. It is like the voice of Jacob, the hand of Esau.
There is no arguing the fact that trade unions, in some cases, do not know when to apply brakes, especially when agitating for workers welfare. But every civil mind should know that where dialogue fails, industrial strike is the potent weapon to whip government into people’s line.
More importantly, does it occur to the sponsor of the bill and his sympathizers that if all Nigerian workers are now compelled to gather in one venue to vote on an industrial strike, the bill has automatically rendered the leadership of the trade unions ineffective? It is like asking the nation’s president to always secure the votes of his people before coming out with every policy. Or did Senator Lokpobiri himself seek the approval of all members of his senatorial district before he presented every bill?
Besides negating the ethos of true democratic practice and the various international conventions to which Nigeria is a signatory, the proposed bill now before the Senate is, by every interpretation, yet another onslaught against Nigerian workers and its people. It must therefore be rejected with all its contents.
And for the fact that Nigeria is currently wringing from matters exigencies such as poverty, unemployment, insecurity, epileptic power supply and other socio-economic malaise, Lokpobiri’s bill can only pass for matters inconsequential . Ok; matters mischievous.
Boye Salau
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