By Odimmegwa Johnpeter, Abuja
As Nigeria joins the rest of the world to commemorate the 2021 International Workers Day, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has restated its commitment to ensuring that human rights principles are mainstreamed into labour practices in various workplaces and amongst labour unions across Nigeria. This is to ensure sustainable industrial harmony, improved productivity and efficient service delivery. This was contained in a statement signed by Fatimah Agwai Mohammed Deputy Director, Public Affairs.
Executive Secretary of the Commission, Tony Ojukwu Esq. who stated this in Abuja during the celebration of this year’s Worker’s Day also known as International Labour Day, observed that mainstreaming human rights in the operations of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) as well as in the private sector, holds the key to job satisfaction and increased productivity.
“It is in this connection that the Commission has continued to train and retrain the law enforcement personnel, the labour force in the MDAs and workers in the private sector to understand and appreciate the need to deploy and mainstream human rights principles and norms while carrying out their official duties”, he stated.
On the other hand, Ojukwu urged the Nigerian workers both in the public and private sector not to renege on their own responsibility of delivering quality and efficient services to justify the trust and confidence reposed in them by their employers.
On the issue of welfare of workers, the NHRC Scribe stated that demand for improvement in the welfare packages of the workforce is a legitimate human response in the light of current challenges facing the workforce, adding that where the resources are not immediately available to address such demands, it behoves on the workers to show understanding while pushing for their demands. He enjoined the government and employers of labour to always try to pay just wages that can address the basic needs of workers for industrial peace and harmony.
The NHRC Boss used the opportunity to commiserate with the families of those who lost their relations in the line of duty as a result of hazards associated with their occupation or from natural causes, saying that “we must as a matter of necessity remember them whenever we mark Worker’s Day, given their sacrifices and contributions to nation-building”.
The Executive Secretary further stated that the current COVID-19 pandemic which resulted in the death of many people across the globe, seriously affected workers especially health workers including Doctors and Nurses. “This calls for comprehensive life insurance policies for Nigerian workers to mitigate the burden of such casualties on any affected family” he added.
https://any.peopleandpowermag.com/international-labour-day-nhrc-congratulates-nigerian-workers-says-human-rights-is-key-for-industrial-harmony/