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Showing posts with label FG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FG. Show all posts

Wednesday 24 June 2015

FG, states & others owe construction firms over N600bn

Construction companies in Nigeria, under the aegis of the Federation of Construction Industry (FOCI), have expressed concern over the high amount of debt the Federal, state and local governments owe the construction industry which they claim is over N600 billion.

According to the body, which is the umbrella group for building and civil engineering contractors, sub-contractors, and plant and equipment suppliers, the Federal Government alone owes its members over N600 billion.
President of FOCI, Mr. Solomon Ogunbusola, who made this known at the 59th Annual General Meeting  of the body, in Abuja said ex-President Goodluck Jonathan gave the construction industry so much work to do without money to execute them.

He said: 
“We are not finding it funny; the bigger ones and smaller ones are finding it extremely difficult. In the construction industry, we are working below 30 percent capacity.
“If you are living in Abuja, for example, at the early hours of 4,5 and 6 a.m, you would see trucks of construction companies coming into Abuja because the workers will have to resume but now you don’t see the trucks including Julius Berger, Stabilini etc coming in.”
“Some of us have closed; we closed the company. We are only resuming in the office for the purpose of continuity and I want my message to be brought out clear as I am saying, we can’t hide it. It is unfortunate that the construction company can’t go and carry placards and start going around saying ‘we are in recession.’ If it is something we can do, we would have done it long ago.
“The Federal Government owes the construction industry over N600 biilion. I can mention three companies that the government alone owes over N200 billion: Julius Berger, N70bn; MCC, over N70bn; Setraco, over N80bn.  Those are the ones I am sure of the exact figures even S&M which is a growing company is being owed over N800m.
“We have never had it so bad like in the last two years because the payments were not coming forth and because we don’t know what to do, we have to just cry aloud.”
Ogunbusola, said FOCI’s 126 registered member companies are using less than 30 % of their staff strength due to mass retrenchment.

He further said that FOCI had contributed a great measure to the construction of modern Nigeria since its incorporation in 1954, hence doesn't think it's fair they aren't getting paid

He said: 
“It is distressing to observe that many construction firms are just going to work for the sake of continuity as many of them are on the verge of collapse due to huge debts owned by the federal, states and local governments.
“We wish to bring to the notice of President Muhammadu Buhari; Senate President Senator Olusola Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker, Yusuf Dogara that the construction companies generally are working at 30 per cent capacity following the mass retrenchment of our workers due to the delay/non-payment of certified jobs by various arms of government.”
Source: Vanguard

Thursday 12 January 2012

FG, Labour talks deadlocked

ABUJA—THE peace talks between the Federal Government, organised labour and civil society may be deadlocked as parties are accusing each of influencing violence that erupted in some parts of the country, particularly Niger state.

In a meeting of the Adhoc committee on Labour between the FG and organised labour yesterday, the Federal Government insisted that labour must call off the strike before negotiations could take place because the organized labour created platform for violence by embarking on strike.

The Federal Government represented by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, former Chief Justice of the Federation, CJN, Justice Alfa Belgore and Minister of Labour and Productivity, Chief Emeka Wogu had made it clear to the labour leaders that because of the trouble in Niger State, labour should denounce violence before any negotiation.

Anyim who arrived the meeting at about 5.35pm mid way into the meeting read a text sent to him chronicling all the mayhem that took place in Niger State and declared that based on this text message, “the agenda of this meeting has changed because labour provided the platform for violence and must denounce those perpetrating violence and also call off the strike.”

‘We should respect the sanctity of life and the social political environment must be calm before any meaningful dialogue can take place.”

Minister of Labour who corroborated this said “it is clear that other people had taken over the protests to cause mayhem and labour is now helpless.”