PDP Governors Ready To Pay New Minimum Wage – Dickson

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The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governors have expressed their readiness to pay the N30,000 minimum wage recently signed into law by President Muhammadu Buhari.

The Chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum, Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa, disclosed while speaking with reporters at the end of the forum’s meeting which ended in the early hours of Friday in Abuja.

Mr Dickson said that the governors were ready to pay the new minimum wage in order to alleviate the plight of workers in PDP-controlled states.

He called on President Buhari to expedite the process for the commencement of the payment of the new minimum wage by sending a bill to the incoming National Assembly to review the revenue sharing formula of the country.

“We are very eager as PDP governors to implement and pay the N30,000 minimum wage that the federal government announced.

“We want to do so to alleviate the plight of the long-suffering Nigeria workers who have been underpaid for long and the workers who are currently groaning in economic hardship as a result of what has gone wrong with the economy since the All Progressives Congress (APC) government took over.

“So, we call on the federal government to expedite the process of presenting a bill to that effect.

“Also we call for a review of the revenue sharing formula to accommodate a fresh Revenue Allocation Formula in the country,” he said.

Mr Dickson also said that no PDP governor was involved in the alleged diversion of local government money, adding that PDP states “do not indulge in such reprehensible conducts”.

He called on the federal government to name the states involved in the act and the period covered.
“We dealt with the allegation of alleged diversion of local government funds by state governments and we condemned it in very strong terms.

“We as governors on the platform of the PDP want to make it clear that no PDP governor is involved in this allegation of diverting local government funds for whatever purpose.

“In our case, the reverse is the case. It is the state governments that have been supporting and subsidising funding for the local government.

“So we call on the federal government and agency in charge to name the state governments and tell us the date and the people who were in charge as the time when this diversion took place,” he said.

Mr Dickson, on behalf of the opposition governors, expressed concern over the alleged politicisation of security apparatus by the federal government, especially in states not controlled by APC.

He said that such supported the growing call for the establishment of state police as a response to the worsening security situation across the nation.

“We believe also that this is the reason for the widespread insecurity.

“So we will take some of this issues up when we interact with the President, Federal Republic of Nigeria, by tomorrow or whenever we see him,” he stated.

The forum also condemned the shutdown and suspension of the operating licence of DAAR Communications Plc by the National Broadcasting Commission, describing it as an act of intolerance and repression against the media.

(NAN)

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