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Accept N62,000 minimum wage offer, Osun Ex-Perm Sec. urges labour

Supreme Desk
19 Jun 2024 4:50 PM GMT
Accept N62,000 minimum wage offer, Osun Ex-Perm Sec. urges labour
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The retired permanent secretary expressed the hope that prices of petroleum products would soon come down, particularly with the ongoing turn-around maintenance of the Port Harcourt Refinery and the coming on stream of Dangote Refinery.

A former Permanent Secretary in Osun, Alhaji Fatai Kolawole, has urged civil servants in Nigeria to accept the N62,000 new minimum wage offered by the Federal Government.

Kolawole, who retired as Permanent Secretary in the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), stated this in an interview with newsmen on Wednesday in Modakeke, Ife East Local Government Area of Osun.

He attributed his position on the new minimum wage for Nigerian workers on the present economic downturn which, he said, was global.

Kolawole, however, described the economic challenges as a passing phase, calling on Nigerians, particularly the civil servants, to exercise patience with President Bola Tinubu on the country’s economic condition.

He said that the civil servants should consider the N62,000 minimum wage offered by the government for now, as thing would be getting better gradually.

The retired permanent secretary expressed the hope that prices of petroleum products would soon come down, particularly with the ongoing turn-around maintenance of the Port Harcourt Refinery and the coming on stream of Dangote Refinery.

“Dangote Refinery has reduced diesel price from N1,600 to N1,200 per litre and has said that by July, petrol will come down to between N400 and N400 per litre.

“We should note that the economic downturn is global, as those in foreign countries are also not having it easy.

“So what is happening is not in Nigeria alone. It should, however, be seen as a passing phase,” he said.

Kolawole noted that the federal government was re-jigging the system during which things might be a bit hard.

“This is a bitter pill that Nigeria must take now and hopefully, within the next one year, things will change for better. Surely, there’s light at the end of the tunnel,” he said.

The retired technocrat expressed confidence in the handlers of the nation’s economy, whom he described as capable hands, assuring that the things would soon turn around for better.

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