
On a day when workers across the globe lift their voices in celebration, Nigerian workers find themselves not in festivity, but in quiet anguish. This May Day, rather than marching with pride, many march in pain — burdened by a system that has pushed them further into poverty and despair.
The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has delivered a scathing reflection on the state of the nation’s workforce, condemning what it describes as a year marked by relentless suffering and policies that have systematically undermined workers’ dignity.
“Since the last May Day, it’s been one blow after another,” lamented NLC President, Joe Ajaero. “The Nigerian worker has endured rising costs, stagnant wages, and a government seemingly deaf to our cries.”
Ajaero portrayed a nation divided—not just by wealth, but by power. “We live in a reality of extremes: the few who control everything, and the many who struggle for scraps,” he said. “Our society has been reduced to a battleground between those who profit and those who perish.”
According to the NLC, this deepening inequality is no accident, but the product of deliberate choices and foreign-driven policies that prioritize profit over people. “The state has become a messenger of austerity,” Ajaero declared. “Instead of shielding its citizens, it imposes the weight of economic hardship on their backs, guided by the dictates of global financial overlords.”
Yet amid the despair, the NLC holds fast to the power of unity. “Ours is not a movement born in comfort—it is forged in resistance,” he said. “And despite the trials, we have stood firm. We negotiated a National Minimum Wage and resisted all attempts to fracture our solidarity.”
Still, the implementation of the N70,000 minimum wage remains inconsistent and uneven across the country. Ajaero emphasized that the fight is far from over. “The law is clear, but many states refuse to comply. Even the federal government has fallen short,” he stated. “We must now begin a broader campaign—not just for enforcement, but for a new wage structure that reflects the true cost of living.”
In a call to action, Ajaero urged Nigerian workers to shed any illusion that change will come without struggle. “We must rise, not as victims, but as a force. Our liberation will not be handed down—it must be demanded. And it is only through unity that we will shake the pillars of this unjust order.”
On this May Day, Nigerian workers are not silent. Their voices echo across the nation—firm, unbroken, and demanding justice.
Source: africaworldnews.org