The Radio Bayelsa chapel of Nigeria Union of
Journalists(NUJ) and Radio Television and Theatre Arts Workers Unions (RATTAWU)
on Wednesday shut the radio station over lingering labour dispute.
Shortly after the station went off air, the management
mobilized armed security men and few employees who rebuffed the strike to
reopen the station playing music all through.
The station’s scheduled programmes and news bulletin
could not be aired.
It was gathered that workers in the radio station
withdrew their services following the reported arrest of the Accountant of the
Station by Policemen from the Ekeki Division of the Police and subsequent
whipping of staff including union officials by youths loya to the general
manager..
The labour unions who said they were protesting incessant
arrest of its members accused the General Manager of the station, Mr John
Idumange of double standards.
They maintained that there were procedures within the
civil service to discipline and deal with offences adding that resorting to
police arrest of staff was detrimental to staff morale and wellbeing.
In a statement, signed by Tonye Yemoleigha and Pius
Otiti, Chairmen of NUJ and RATTAWU respectively the unions urged Idumange to
immediately withdraw the employment letters recently issued to some persons in
the station.
They said that there was no justification for employment
when the General Manager who was appointed on December 6, 2016 had lamented
that the station was over staffed and subsequently redeployed competent staff
from the FM station.
According to them, Idumange cannot be employing anyone
after he recently orchestrated the redeployment of some of the finest hands in
the broadcast outfit claiming the organization is overstaffed.
They noted that despite the availability of funds the
350KVA generator acquired for smooth operations has remained unserviceable
since December 2016.
“Another worrisome dimension to us as unions is the redeployment
of eight out of ten plant engineers from the station to other parastatals,
leaving only two to man the plant.
“This means they will not run shift nor observe off days in
an environment where radiation is very high practically ‘killing’ workers
daily.
“Idumange is grounding the place and not repositioning it
because he does not understand how the media industry operates and lacks
requisite managerial competence and dexterity to head a civil service
organization,”the unions stated.
The Unions, the statement further said are not opposed to
staff redeployment, but insisted that the unions should also be part of the
process to ensure that the best of hands were not sacrificed on the altar of
nepotism, sentiment or witch-hunt.
“We are also aware of the alleged over N5 million naira
payroll fraud which Idumange claims to have uncovered and has referred to the
Police for investigation.
“Ordinarily, in line with established procedures, an
Investigative Panel should have been instituted to look into the matter and
come up with a report with which management would act as appropriate.
“All these are expressly spelt out in the Public Service
Rules; however, we are requesting for a copy of the police report on this after
their investigation.
“We have asked management to properly discipline everyone
involved in an established case of running salary of a staff who resigned with
effect from August 2016,” the joint statement said
The unions said that they worried that a staff who was
offered an appointment by the State Board of Internal Revenue and released on
May 17, 2016 is being made head of a department and receiving double salary.
“We are calling on the Bayelsa State House of Assembly
to, as part of its oversight function, invite both Idumange and the Unions’
leaderships with a view to looking into the issues.
Reacting to the development, Idumange dismissed the
allegations leveled against him saying that the unions were being used to
sabotage his efforts at repositioning the station which was in a deplorable
state before his appointment.
He noted that
there was no going back on his reform efforts as they received the blessings of
the supervising Bayelsa Ministry of Information.
“This small radio station has 346 workers; employment and
job placement have never followed due process, we are currently reorganizing
the place and they are resisting our efforts.
“Those ghost workers must be fished out and the payroll
cleaned up.
“The wage bill of the station is N35 million monthly and
it is not sustainable and my predecessor incurred a debt of N40 million.
“The unions are being instigated by the Heads of
Department affected in the illegal recruitment, and those who came into that place
through the back door,”he said.
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