The Nigeran Senate is putting final touches to a bill which will abolish contract staffing in Nigeria. The casualization of employment in the private and public sector in Nigeria has become a norm in Nigeria and has become a tool for the exploitations of Nigeran youths. Contract employees are typically employed on a non-permanent basis without benefits such as health insurance, paid leave, and other compensation enjoyed by full-time employees.
The bill which was sponsored by Senator Ayo Akinyelure (Ondo Central – PDP), was first read in March 2020 and was then referred to the Committee on Employment, Labor and Productivity, with a mandate to report back within four weeks. The bill passed second reading in the Senate on Thursday, February 18, 2021.
Senator Akinyelure said:
“Workers no longer have regularized employment terms; therefore, Nigerian graduates are treated like second-class citizens in their own country, while foreigners from underdeveloped countries from Asia like India, Pakistan, Lebanon, etc, with less qualifications to Nigerian graduates are placed as managers above Nigerian graduates,”
Senator Smart Adeyemi (Kogi West – APC) said:
“It is just inexplicable to have some of our citizens being captured under this devilish and wicked system of employment, and you see them working for years without any future for them.
“This casualization is just a system of keeping some people as slaves. Let this bill be supported and let us pass it into law and stop the enslavement of our younger generation,”
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Senator Uche Ekwunife (Anambra Central – PDP) said casualization of employment has diminished the standard of service in the country’s workforce. She said there must be a legal process for employing people in public and private establishments to prevent the abuse of dignity of Nigerians.
A few senators sounded a note of caution about the legislation, Senator Tokunbo Abiru (Lagos East – APC) said employers in the private sector seek efficiency in business especially since they already have to provide for a lot of structure meant to be shouldered by the government.
He said the issue around contract servicing is already well-defined in the private sector, and that the bill could have terrible consequences for Nigerian workers and the unemployed.
“If we go this route, part of what we’ll find is we’ll increase the unemployment rate because what the private sector will do is the normal job for a man today can be increased for three or four people,”
The bill was unanimously passed for a second reading when Senate President, Ahmad Lawan (Yobe North – APC), put it up to a voice vote.
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