Home NEWS ThisDay Newspapers Incur Wrath Of Journalists’ Union Over 9 Months Unpaid Salaries

ThisDay Newspapers Incur Wrath Of Journalists’ Union Over 9 Months Unpaid Salaries

Nduka-ObaigbenaMembers of the Lagos state chapter of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) took to the street around the premises of Thisday newspaper company in Apapa, Lagos today to protest what they alleged to be none payment of nine months salaries of their colleagues working for the organization.
The newspaper management is also alleged to have failed to remit personal income tax, pension cooperative deductions and check-off dues from paid salaries in the last four years.
The union, led by the NUJ Lagos State Chairman, Deji Elumoye, carried placards and barricaded the entrances of the media organization, owned by the President of the Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria, Nduka Obaigbena.
Mr. Elumoye, who is also a staff of ThisDay, said he decided to lead the protest against his organization to show that charity begins at home.
He said the protesting journalists were condemning the continuous refusal of the management of ThisDay and 12 other media houses to settle the several months’ arrears of salaries to their workers, especially journalists.
”I am an associate editor in Thisday. But, I chose to picket Thisday first. There are other media organizations owing over two years, and we will go to all of them. It is time to put a stop to non-payment of salaries in media organizations. Many families cannot pay their house rents or their children’s school fees. The journalists are paid peanuts. Yet, they do not get the salaries. It is sad.”
The chairman called on newspaper publishers to prioritise the welfare of workers, adding that anyone that cannot operate and pay workers should close his or her business.
He said the publisher of Thisday, Mr. Obaigbena, who is the president of NPAN, must lead by example by paying his workers all their entitlements.
He called on the National Pension Commission to prosecute media owners, who do not remit workers’ pension contributions to serve as deterrent to others.
In his reaction, in solidarity with the NUJ, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said it was giving full backing to the protest by journalists against several months of unpaid salaries by the management of some prominent media houses in the country.
The acting president of the Congress, Peters Adeyemi, said the principle and logic that the labourer was deserving of his wages was infinite, sacred and sacrosanct as the core of the employer-worker relationship.
The violation of this principle, Mr. Adeyemi pointed out, was not only a negation of the essence and basis of work, but also a peril to the family and statutory obligations of the worker to the State and his God.
“The picketing of ThisDay represents a bold and courageous response after all the processes of an amicable resolution had been exhausted,” the NLC said. “It also represents the beginning of a long process of engagement with other non-salary-paying media organizations.”
Mr. Adeyemi listed the other affected media houses to include the Africa Independent Television (AIT), which is owing about 17 months arrears; Independent Newspapers Limited, publishers of Daily Independent (nine months arrears), and Tell Magazine (eight months).
The others include the National Mirror and Newswatch Daily (7 months), both owned by Jimoh Ibrahim; The News/PM News (9 months); the Daily Champion (18 months); Hallmark owned by Emeka Obasi (8 months) and the Daily Times (6 months).
“We stand shoulder to shoulder on the picket line with our members as they seek to enforce their fundamental rights against these organizations. In the spirit of our cherished slogan of “an injury to one is an injury to all” Congress stands ready to avail our affiliate its full solidarity and support if this unfortunate situation lingers.”
Although the Congress said it needed businesses, especially media businesses that perform the dual role of employment and watchdog, the NLC said it found it a sad irony that these media organizations, which have been in the forefront of the popular struggle for the enforcement of the social contract between the state and the citizenry, would default in exercising a basic and fundamental obligation to their employees.
The default, the NLC noted, is undermining the moral authority of the media houses to speak out on public issues, adding that the affected media organizations must muster all the necessary resources to pay up not just these salary arrears, but subsequent salaries as they fall due.
“The notion by some of the proprietors that the possession alone of the identity card of their media organizations by the journalist is a meal ticket, is patently false and should be discarded,” the NLC said.
“If they believe it is that easy, let them run the organizations from the streets themselves.” [myad]

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