Maritime

Dockworkers Bemoan Poor Patronage At Rivers Port

Published

on

Comptroller-General of Customs, retired Col. Hameed Ali (middle), being received by Deputy Comptrollers-General Dan Ugo (left) and Austin Warikoru (2nd left), at the inauguration of the National Logistics Committee on Donation of Relief Materials to Internally Displaced Persons (idps) in Abuja on Wednesday. With them is the Chairman of the committee, Deputy Comptroller-General Sanusi Umar.

The chairman, Maritime
Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN), Dockworkers Branch in Rivers State, Comrade Tony Wokocha has confirmed that the drop in cargo vessels that call at the Rivers Port had led to the financial hardship of its members.
Wokocha, who disclosed this to journalists in Port Harcourt, Tuesday, said since there was a lull in vessels at the Rivers Port, the dockworkers were made to face financial challenges due to the nature of their job as it was based on tonnage handling.
The union’s boss lamented, “There is anxiety over low vessel arrivals at the Rivers Port, even as dock workers cry out over hardships.
You know no work, no pay. As it stands now, dockworkers will hardly go home with N2,000 in a month. The situation is precarious. We are afraid because we do not know how long this will last”.
He disclosed that the economic hardship confronting the dockworkers in Rivers Port is bitting harder as most of the workers are family bread winners.
According to him, “some dockworkers have family of three to five, and can no longer put food on the family’s table. The can no longer pay school fees for their children and the children are dropping out of school”, adding that the situation is pathetic and alarming.
Some of the dockworkers who spoke with our correspondent on anonymity at their pools in the port said they were facing great challenges as there was a low ebb of cargo vessels at the port, and most times irregular.
They however attributed the development to government policies on importation as most importers prefer to ship their cargoes to western ports rather the eastern ports.
The dockworkers also said the foreign exchange debacle had also contributed to the poor cargo vessels that called at the port among others.

 

Collins Barasimeye

Trending

Exit mobile version