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NSITF: Workplace Safety, Social Protection, Key to National Devt
Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja
Managing Director of the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), Barrister Oluwaseun Falaye has identified workplace safety and social protection as foundations for national development as they are social pillars of economic stability and national development.
The NSITF MD made this assertion at a stakeholders forum in Abuja on Monday to deliberate on the operationalization of the Employees Compensation Scheme (ECS) and ways of enhancing its success.
Faleye said: Workplace safety and social protection are not
optional; they are foundational to our national development, economic productivity, and human dignity.
They are not just moral obligations, they are pillars of social justice and human dignity, they are pillars of Economic stability and national productivity.
They are pillars of peace of mind for workers and risk mitigation for employers. When workers are safe, employers thrive and the nation prospers. In short, protecting workers is protecting the nations future, he emphasized
Giving reasons for the engagement, Faleye explained, The theme of this years conference, Enhancing Stakeholder Collaboration for Sustainable Employees Compensation Administration,
aligns perfectly with the call to protect the legal frameworks that guarantee social insurance for Nigerian workers, frameworks that protect against injuries, occupational diseases, or death in the line of duty.
According to him, it is also a call for visionary leadership in securing both employee welfare and employer sustainability.
The NSITF Boss said that the Employees Compensation Act (ECA) 2010 mandated NSITF to provide adequate and equitable compensation for workers who suffer work-related injuries, diseases, and disabilities including mental health.
He continued that the Fund is further mandated to provide compensation and support for the families of employees in case of any fatality.
Other services provided by the Fund, according to Barrister Faleye, are rehabilitation and empowerment after workplace accidents, but most importantly, prevention of workplace hazards.
Quoting data from the International Labour Organisation (ILO) to highlight the enormity of workplace accidents, Barrister Olúwaseun Faleye said, More than 2.8 million workers die annually from occupational accidents and diseases while over 374 million suffer non-fatal injuries leading to long-term disabilities, adding that the global cost of poor occupational safety is estimated at 4 percent of global GDP annually.
He lamented that Nigerias situation has been made worse by the lack of proper data, large informal sector of the economy, high risk sectors, and institutional culture of non-adherence to safety and non-compliance.
He explained that new and emerging challenges necessitated a reworking of the laws to better meet modern needs.
Faleye therefore urged members of the legal profession, especially judges to help advance the cause; taking social protection as a matter of right, avoiding technicalities in interpretations and through advocacy.
While delivering a keynote address, President of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria, Justice Benedict Kanyip said although the workshop is designed primarily for the benefit of judges of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria the engagement is wide enough to include Registry Staff of the Court, staff of the Commission, lawyers and stakeholders as far as employees compensation is concerned.
Injury in workplaces is today a commonplace. Nigeria is expected to adopt measures that prevent workplace injuries. And where injuries do occur, to compensate for them, he stressed as he explained that Nigeria, by virtue of its membership of the International Labour Organisation (ILO), is bound by these twin objectives: to prevent, and compensate for, workplace injuries.
It is for these that Nigeria ratified the ILO Occupational Safety and Health Convention 1981 (C155) ratified on 3 May 1994; and the Promotional Framework for Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 2006 (C187) ratified on 8 November 2022,” he continued.
Justice Kanyip submitted that any failure to extend compensation to all victims of occupational injuries would undermine Nigerias obligations under the C155 and C187.
Pointing out a weakness in the extant law, Justice Kanyip said, Where an employer fails to remit his contribution as enjoined by section 33 of the ECA, it remains to be seen whether an employee, who is a victim of occupational injury but cannot claim from the NSITF under the ECA because of the non-remittance, can succeed against the employer for statutory negligence i.e. for failure to remit the contribution. Right now, only time will tell.







