
The workers were sacked on Monday in a bid
by the troubled newspaper outfit to navigate through the biting economic recession
in the country.
The newspaper outfit is owned by Nduka
Obaigbena, a shrewd business man who was fingered in the $2.1 billion arms
scandal, but had to return some millions before being left off the hook.
The sacked staff have not been paid their
arrears of salaries and had been laid off with nothing to fall back on.
Some staff said they were being owed 11
months, others 17 months. Some claimed that they only received salary only once
this year.
Some editors of the newspaper are being
owed between 15 and 17 months unpaid salary arrears.
THISDAY sources said staff of the company
were suffering seriously in the midst of plenty as a result of bad management.
Series of protests and strikes in the
company had sometimes forced the management to pay one month or few months of
outstanding salaries after which the status quo remains.
On some few occasions this year, staff had
shutdown the company due to months of unpaid salaries while the company had
gone to call the police from Area ‘B’ Command, Apapa to disrupt the protests.
Journalists under the employ of the
company have lamented that the management has always deducted from source their
Contributory Pension Scheme, CPS and never remit such deduction to the Pension
Fund Administrators, PFAs.
Since 2009, workers’ CPS have not been
remitted to the PFAs, painting a bleak future for the journalists under THISDAY
employ.
Last year, Obaigbena ordered the sack 13
key staff in the Abuja office for demanding the payment of their arrears of
salaries being owed them.
The staff had to threaten the management of
the company to pay them their arrears and CPS or they would take legal action
and exposed the ills of the company to the outside world. The threat forced the
management to recall the affected staff for peace to reign.
It was also gathered that THISDAY is
planning to convert all editorial staff to freelance journalists beginning from
January 2017, a move that is likely to create turbulence in the company.
In the midst of unpaid salary arrears,
Obaigbena was said to have purchased a brand new Rolls-Royce car worth N120
million this year, a decision that got staff angry and fed up with the
unwholesome system.
No comments:
Post a Comment