The ThisDay Newspaper
Headquarters in Lagos was shut down following the non-payment of staff salary. The
National Union of Printing, Publishing and Paper Product Workers on Thursday
claimed workers had been owed for four months despite the publisher, Nduka
Obaigbena, in April promising to pay within 30 days.
Obaigbena had explained then that salary payment was hampered by
the Boko Haram attack on his Jabi, Abuja office but the Secretary, Nigeria
Union of Journalist Abuja, Emmanuel Ogbeche said  even before the
printing, publishing and paper product workers shut down the media house, the
NUJ had planned of doing so itself.
“NUJ will still go ahead next week to enforce working
conditions. The shut down does not distract what NUJ has decided to do,”
Ogbeche said
“ThisDay is not the only Newspaper that NUJ is set to go after
following default of staff wages, any other newspaper or media organization
that defaults will be implicated also. We know that
“Peoples’ Daily is in arrears of workers’ wages, we intend to go
there as well. Blueprint is in default of two months, we will also go there,”
he said.
Defending his company, Obaigbena reportedly said:
“They are not being owed for four months but just a couple of
months and we said we are settling everybody and we are in the process of doing
that,” Obaigbena said. “There is a total reorganization of the operations of
the company which includes payments; so that is in process right now.
He insisted all is well: “The company is not shutdown, Apapa is
just one of our offices and there is just an industrial action; a legitimate
cry of workers to embark on an industrial action”.
According to reports, Obaigbena
said that he respects the rights of workers.  Ogbeche warned other
publishers owing staff salary to pay or face the consequences.
 

 
 
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