The
Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria on
Saturday insisted that its planned industrial action will commence on
Monday.
The group however, noted that it was ready to discuss with the government and other concerned organisations on the strike.
According
to PENGASSAN, nothing has changed since it issued a statement to
announce that its meeting with the Federal Government to avert the
strike ended in a stalemate.
This is coming as the Group
General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, Ndu Ughamadu, told our correspondent that the
Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Maikanti Baru, has been meeting
with the unions in the oil sector to ensure stability in the industry.
Ughamadu
was optimistic that the NNPC would be able to persuade the association
to rescind its decision to embark on strike by Monday, as the planned
industrial action had led to panic buying in Abuja.
He said long queues of motorists had been noticed at the few filling stations that dispensed petrol on Saturday.
PENGASSAN
on Friday announced that it would embark on an indefinite strike on
Monday, following a stalemate in the peace meeting which the Minister of
State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, brokered between the union
and Neconde Energy Limited.
The oil union and Neconde had been embroiled in crisis over allegation of anti-worker practices.
The
union alleged that the management of Neconde wrongly terminated the
employment of some of its workers, and threatened to go on strike if the
sacked workers were not recalled within 72 hours.
The issue made
the government to initiate a meeting between the two parties in Abuja
last week, but the meeting ended in a deadlock.
When asked if
the union would halt the strike should the government meet with its
officials on the matter, the Public Relations Officer, PENGASSAN,
Fortune Obi replied, “One thing you should know is that at PENGASSAN, we
are a body of professionals and we are open to discussion at all times
because we believe in dialogue. We keep our doors open for effective
discussions and that has been our style.”
Meanwhile, many
motorists queued for petrol on Saturday, as some users of the commodity
said they were stockpiling fuel in order to have enough should PENGASSAN
embark on strike on Monday.
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