NUPENG & PENGASSAN members have shut
down the operations of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)
nationwide following Tuesday’s unbundling of the corporation. Members of staff
and management of the corporation arrived their various offices on Wednesday
morning to discover that they could not gain entrance following the total
strike.
The immediate impact
of the strike will be nationwide fuel scarcity as products will not be lifted
by NUPENG. It is not expected to affect the crude oil export yet except the
Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) joins in solidarity. Ibe Kachikwu,
minister of state for petroleum resources who doubles as the NNPC group managing
director, had announced the creation of seven independent units on Tuesday,
namely downstream, gas and power, refineries, ventures, corporate planning and
services, and finance and accounts.
NNPC’s stranded
workers in Abuja PHOTO: Fred Nwabufo The group executive committee (GEC) of the
the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the
National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) convened an
emergency meeting at 10pm on Tuesday to discuss the development.
At the end of the
meeting, GEC sent this message to all members: “The GEC of NUPENG &
PENGASSAN at its meeting of 8th March 2016, which started at 10:00pm has
extensively discussed the pronouncement of the GMD on NNPC UNBUNDLING. We
observed that the GMD/HMSP totally disregarded due process and failed to engage
STAKEHOLDERS. Hence, from midnight today, ALL NNPC LOCATIONS will be SHUT DOWN
COMPLETELY until further notice.
Further directives
will be communicated accordingly.” When TheCable visited the NNPC headquarters
on Wednesday, hundreds of the corporation’s staff littered the road causing
gridlock on Herbert Macaulay way. Unionists in red were at the scene
barricading the entrance to the NNPC building. Also, security agents were on
hand to forestall break down of order.
A staff member of the
NNPC, who spoke on condition of anonymity, report that he was at the corporation’s building as
of 7:30am on Wednesday but met “it barricaded by members of PENGASSAN.”
Journalists tried to speak with one of the leaders of the union,
but he said: “We are not here for you. This is not for the press.” Kachikwu had
said the distribution of subsidiary companies of the corporation would further
be restructured into direct management of the divisions. Last week, Kachikwu
announced that the government was planning to unbundle the corporation into 30
profitable companies.
These people should allow the Minister to work, all these oil cabal calling themselves Union members or stakeholders that always hold NNPC to ransom, your end has come.




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