Angry workers on Monday disrupted the 2017 May Day celebrations at the Eagle Square, Abuja, over the failure of the Federal Government to give them a new minimum wage in the country.
The workers were also angry that neither President Muhammadu Buhari nor Vice President Yemi Osinbajo was at the event to address them on the grave issues of survival affecting them.
They insisted that the N18,000 minimum wage has become inadequate to feed their families and indeed to survive in the face of the biting effects of the economic recession in the country.
Trouble started when the workers who had gathered in front of the podium to listen to the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, were told that the Acting Permanent Secretary of the ministry, Mrs. Abiola Bawa, was to address them on his behalf.
That angered the workers who insisted that the minister should address them on the issue of minimum wage while they would wait to see the representative of the president.
They rejected the explanation by the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Ayuba Wabba, that the minister could not read his own address as he was meant to read the president’s address as his representative.
The angry workers brought out their posters and chanted “we need a new minimum wage now” and insisted that the event would not continue until the issue was addressed.
However, when Ngige mounted the podium, they again insisted that they needed a new minimum wage and that he had nothing to offer them.
They insisted that they were tired of being deceived on the issue of the minimum wage amidst growing economic hardship in the country.
Labour leaders of the NLC and the TUC made frantic efforts to douse the tension for Ngige to address the workers without success.
Even former Governor of Edo State who was also a former President of the NLC, Adams Oshiomhole, could not get the workers to listen to him.
Senate President Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, were also at the rally.