Ahead of the 2023 general elections, the Minister of Labour
and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige on Tuesday formally declared his intention
to contest the position of President, saying he has a burning desire to see a
prosperous, united and equitable Nigeria.
Ngige, who unveiled his presidential ambition before a
mammoth crowd at St. Mary’s Catholic Church Alor, Idemili South local
government area of Anambra State, is seeking the ticket of his party, the All
Progressives Congress, APC as its Presidential candidate.
Addressing the crowd, comprising APC faithful and other
supporters, the former Anambra State Governor said having served 40 years in
the public service, he was fully equipped as an administrator, with a huge
wealth of experience, capacity and energy as well as a large heart to
accommodate the differences among Nigerians.
Ngige who recounted his numerous achievements as a former
governor, ex-Senator and two-time minister, described himself as the “Jack of
all trade and master of all” that Nigeria needs now.
He thanked the President for the opportunity offered him to
serve as a minister, which he said broadened his knowledge of the various
ministries, departments and agencies, being a member of the Federal Executive
Council (FEC) and the conciliator of disputes between employers and employees
in the various arms of government and the private sector.
According to him, his stewardship in the difficult and
complex Ministry of Labour as the chief conciliator enriched his knowledge of
the problems of workers, the difficulty the industrialists and entrepreneurs
face, why industries close down, and why some run far below their installed
capacity and in turn employ fewer hands.
He said, “I also know the unproductive areas and the areas
of waste in the public service. I see the energy in labour that has not been
properly harnessed. I have seen the low hanging fruits in agriculture, the
handicaps, the factors that militate against job creation, which is one of the
mandates of my ministry, especially the inter-ministerial and inter agencies
cooperation that is missing. I have seen our burgeoning population without a
corresponding advantage in terms of improvement in GDP.”
He said under his watch, the Labour Ministry has conciliated
1683 industrial disputes in the last seven years, 95 per cent done successfully
in the ministry and its agency, the Industrial Arbitration Panel (IAP), while
only about three per cent of the disputes went up to the National Industrial
Court of Nigeria(NICN).
The minister said they took labour administration to a
higher level in the international arena, where their labour diplomacy brought
Nigeria back to the Governing Board (GB) of the International Labour
Organisation (ILO) after ten years of absence.
He explained that Nigeria came in first as deputy (titular)
in 2017, and is now a full regular member of the GB, having also been elected
as the Chairperson of the Government Group, where he presided over the affairs
of 187 countries of the ILO between 2019 to 2020.
“My dear friends, colleagues and comrades, many would wonder
that after serving seven years as Minister in one of the most difficult
ministries of government, in a polity riddled with rising unemployment,
bickering and economic disputes between workers and employers, in a famished
economy, Dr Chris Nwabueze Ngige would have asked for a deserved rest.
“Yes, a deserved rest would have been okay for me as a
person but the zeal, the burning desire in me to see a prosperous, united and
equitable Nigeria, where no man is oppressed, where there is no chasm between
the haves and have not, would not allow me to go home and rest.”
“Today, as I sit back to ruminate on the state of our
country, I find a country led by a patriot, good-hearted leader, Muhammadu
Buhari, though greatly misunderstood especially in the South-Eastern part of
Nigeria. Permit me to say that I want to get the nomination of our party and to
stand on its manifesto to actualize and execute the programmes of the APC.
“Shall we say the APC as a party and as a government has
failed? The answer is a big No. The three cardinal issues upon which Nigeria
gave us a mandate in 2015 are infrastructure/economic development, security and
anti-corruption. In properly assessing this government and our programmes, it
is important we start from where we met Nigeria in 2015. I don’t want to be one
of those in the class of wailers, wallowing in self-pity. No! I want to be your
ambassador so I can go and grow prosperity, and grow the resources that are needed
for a big country like Nigeria.
“Truth be told, Nigeria has been in the years of the locust,
starting from the 80s, 90s, the long period of military rule to 2015. Luckily,
the leaves were all eaten away but the tree and the branches still stand.
“Yes I’m part of this administration, so I should know what
the resources look like and I know what the challenges are. This is because I’m
in the room and I’m privy to decisions taken. In scoring the administration,
one can give us a pass, credit or distinction in infrastructure depending on
the assessor. But let me ask. Can you score a government that has invested
massively in infrastructural development, built roads and bridges like Lagos
-Ibadan-Ilorin Rd, 2nd Niger Bridge almost completed, and the reactivation of
the rail system anything but distinction?
“You can also score us in security, again depending on the
baseline – even though we know that the security deterioration is also linked
to the economic situation of the country, which has stifled jobs while the
population gallops by the day.”
Ngige said if he becomes President, the Nigerian Police, as
the agency in charge of homeland security would be equipped with men and
materials to function optimally, lamenting that attempts by the current
administration to increase their men by 10,000 every year in the last five
years were stifled by unnecessary bureaucracy.
According to him, the decentralization of the Nigerian
police is the way to go, so that governors of states can be chief security
officers in name and in reality.
He added that the structure of the Nigerian police needs to
change and mimic that of the judiciary which has worked well with the State
judiciary and the federal arm in a handshake.
He said as a former governor and chief security officer of a
state, he knows what to do and how to do it.
Ngige recalled that as Governor of Anambra State, he met
N42b debt, schools closed for one year with teachers and civil servants owed
for almost a year, doctors and health professionals on strike for eight months
and pensioners were treated as “dead woods.”
“I met dilapidated infrastructure, with hopelessness and
despair written on the faces of the people of Anambra State. The judiciary was
also neither equipped nor energized to do its work. Importantly, I turned all
these into history as I cleared the arrears of salaries, and pensions, as well
as paid off genuine creditors. I and my team rejuvenated the civil service. We
further introduced knowledge-based promotion through examination. Under our
administration, 500km of roads across all senatorial zones were built in 30
months, unprecedented in the history of the State. Handled by the best
contractors, these roads still stand like the Rock the of Gibraltar, 16 years
after. Anambra then became a metaphor for solid roads under the slogan of
Anambra People’s Money at work!”
The presidential hopeful assured that if elected President,
he would deploy the resources belonging to Nigerians to the expansion of the
infrastructure efforts of the current administration in roads, rail, air and
even inland waterways.
“Some persons have been feeding the public with wrong
information that my office is to blame for the incessant strikes by labour
unions. Here is an opportunity to explain my role as a conciliator. There is a
misconception that the conciliator is also the man who will actualize and
implement whatever is reached in an agreement. This is wrong. A conciliator is
like an arbitrator and not the person who implements the agreement so reached.
At most, he can do facilitation by persuasion for the parties to implement the
agreement and that’s where the role stops.
“In the case of the university unions, it is important to
make it clear that the Federal Government is not owing them salaries and wages
rather, what is being owed is a carry-over of allowances (Earned Academic
Allowances/Earned Allowances) from the past administration and that the
carry-over is being paid in instalment, under a negotiated agreement. On one or
two occasions the government defaulted for lack of revenue to pay, it was
properly rescheduled.
“Unfortunately, detractors have told unions that Ngige is
their problem. How can the Minister of Labour be their problem when he is not
their employer? The Minister of Labour is neither a member of the Governing
Council of universities nor the Minister of Education or Finance. The same goes
for health workers and doctors. The government side and the fixers of salaries
and wages met with them and told them what they are able to pay, which is an
ILO principle of Negotiation – Capacity and ability to pay. Instead of
following up with negotiations, they would turn around to blame the Minister.
“For example, ASUU invented a payment platform, called UTAS.
UTAS has been subjected to necessary tests by National Information Technology
Development Agency (NITDA) which said it cannot recommend the system for use,
having passed the User Acceptability test, but failed the Integrity and
Credibility test. ASUU said Ngige can do the magic, to force NITDA to clear
UTAS and also force the Ministry of Finance to deploy it. This magic is beyond
me. They ascribed the powers I don’t have to my office.
“However, conciliation and arbitration are within the ambit
of my Ministry and we are doing whatever we can, including persuasion, and
subtly moving into other ministries, to try to pressure them, in order to
resolve some of the issues. I’m a concerned parent whose children are also in
the public universities in Nigeria. In the Seventh Senate, I championed the
cause of labour. How then can I turn around to stop the progress of these
institutions? God forbid !”
Ngige urged the leaders of the university system to tell
their members the truth about what is happening with UTAS at the NITDA as well
as the re-negotiation of the 2009 agreement ongoing in the Ministry of
Education, which ASUU has shunned.
He appealed to ASUU to reconsider its position and save the
education sector in Nigeria.
He recalled that two labour centres in Nigeria, the NLC and
TUC had on different occasions commended his stewardship in repositioning
labour and engendering social dialogue, even as the Nigerian Medical
Association and the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors commended his
efforts in resolving age-long challenges in the health sector, describing him
as “a medical elder of repute.”
Earlier, the President of the National Forum for South-East
Presidency, Patrick Enunekwu described Ngige as the most qualified among all
the aspirants, saying his experience cuts across all the arms of government
including the judiciary, which he worked with while serving as Governor
Enunekwu said the roads Ngige built over 17 years ago in
Anambra State still stand the test of time.
Speaking in a similar vein, a former APC governorship
aspirant in Anambra State, Kaodilinye Okelekwe extolled Ngige for his
selflessness, determination, self-confidence, farsightedness and good
judgement, which are the characteristics of a good leader.
Also, the leader of the South-East APC Progressive Forum,
Chukwudi Uba expressed trust in the ability of Ngige to restore security in
Nigeria and revamp the economy to ensure a prosperous Nigeria where all
citizens would enjoy the benefits of the resources of the country maximally.
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