Electricity Workers Issue Strike Notice to FG over Planned Sale of TCN

Electricity workers under the aegis of the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) have served the federal government a notice of industrial action over planned sale of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) had earlier rejected the plan to sell the TCN and declared “Operation Save TCN from the Enemies of Nigeria”.

Meanwhile, NUEE in a statement issued yesterday by its General Secretary, Mr. Joe Ajaero, argued that “leaving the nation’s full power architecture in the hands of private business owners, who lack the expertise to own and run critical economic assets, poses serious security risk to the nation, as we will be driven by the wimps and caprices of the ‘harvestors’.”

Ajaero contended that the enemies of Nigeria had once deceived the country to grant about N1.5 trillion to the same private individuals the government sold its distribution and generation facilities to, at a ridiculous rate of not more than N400 billion.

He lamented that almost eight years after the privatisation of the power sector, there had not been any visible improvement in terms of power supply, expansion or investments by the new owners of the DisCos and GenCos.

The NUEE General Secretary accused “Three key officers working with a few vested interest in the Ministry of Power, who do not understand the concept in power generation, transmission and distribution,” of carrying out “their selfish personal privatisation agenda and milk the nation off it’s vital economic assets.”

“Why would the federal government want to privatise TCN with the improvement made in terms of expansion and strengthened transmission network?

“The five-yearly performance appraisal process provided for in the Electric Power Sector Reforms, EPSR, Act, 2005, has been jettisoned despite calls by Nigerians to review the performances of the sector players.

“A dime has never been declared as profit for government’s 40% asset ownership in the privatised companies till date, yet it remains a pitiable tale of ‘private gain, public disaster’.

“We had alerted the federal government and Nigerians against going into a fraudulent/fictitious agreement with SIEMENS towards improving transmission capacity to a level which the existing nation’s transmission capacity had surpassed.

“It will be recalled that in December 2019, the Union embarked on an industrial action over non-implementation of agreements reached with the federal government over the 2013 privatisation and other salient issues bedevilling the power sector.

“Despite the intervention of the leadership of the National Assembly and the Ministry of Labour, the Ministry of Power in its deep slumber is still busy pursuing rats when its house is on fire.

“This statement serves as notice to Nigerians that the Union will resume its suspended industrial action for the non-implementation of the agreements”.

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