THE
stage appeared set for another round of showdown between President
Goodluck Jonathan and labour unions on the issue of fuel subsidy with
labour on Tuesday asking the Federal Government to revert the pump price
of petrol to N65 per litre.
The Nigeria Labour Congress and the
Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria said the Jonathan
administration had no option other than to reverse the price from its
present N97 to the old N65 per litre since the President had said he was
rethinking the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment programme.
Jonathan on Monday reportedly told
chieftains of the Peoples Democratic Party at their 58th National
Executive Committee meeting in Abuja that implementation of the
palliatives to cushion the effects of subsidy removal were no longer
feasible.
The President said the palliatives had been based on the 100 per cent removal of subsidy on local consumption of fuel.
“This (SURE) is developed with the
expectation that we were going to completely deregulate the Downstream
sector of the oil industry, the 100 per cent removal of subsidy… we will
still come up with a document based on what we get,” he told the PDP
members and ordered them to withdraw the circulated SURE document.
The SURE programme had been hurriedly
designed in January to douse the tension generated by the sudden removal
of subsidy and consequent jump in the pump price of petrol.
The Senate has said it is backing the
action of the President. Leader of the Senate, Victor Ndoma-Egba, said
Jonathan made the plans based on zero-subsidy arrangement and for which
the 2012 budget was prepared.
“The President said he wanted to remove
subsidy, Nigerians said they don’t want it removed. Now that he was not
able to realise his plan, where will he get the money to carry out that
policy,” Ndoma-Egba said.
He, however, stated that the President would still need to work with the savings made from the partial removal of subsidy.
“The President will have to look at the
proceeds from partial deregulation and work with what is saved. That is
the reason why the document earlier produced should be revised to
reflect the current realities,” he said.
Apart from the NLC and the ASCN, the
House of Representatives also on Tuesday took a swipe at the President
and said it was vindicated concerning its pessimism over the government
palliatives.
The Acting General Secretary of the NLC,
Mr. Owei Lakemfa, in a telephone interview with one of our
correspondents on Tuesday said the Federal Government had no option
but to revert the fuel pump price from the current N97 to the pre-2012
pump price of fuel.
He said that a recent advertisement in a
national daily in which the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, claimed that the Federal Government realised N15b
allocation from the proposed subsidy savings supported the claim that
the Federal Government was making some money from the regime change in
the pump price of fuel and that the funds realised from the fuel price
increase should be adequately utilised to execute projects.
According to Lakemfa, the Federal
Government is only trying to prepare the minds of Nigerians against
expecting results from the increase in the pump price of petrol in the
country by announcing the withdrawal of the programme.
He urged the government to fulfil its
promise to use the proceeds of fuel price increase to construct roads,
build a second Niger bridge, and other promises contained in the SURE
document.
He said that the Nigerian citizenry was
seriously interested in what the Federal Government could do with the
proceeds from the increase in the pump price of petroleum products.
He called on the Federal Government to
ensure that the Ministries of Petroleum and Finance were cleansed based
on the serious discoveries made at the Subsidy Probe by the House of
Representatives.
“Right from the onset, organised labour
believed that the Federal Government was not sincere with this
programme but the government claimed that we were going to get results
in six months. What government is saying now is that we should not
expect results,” the NLC scribe said.
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