From: Jari-Pekka Raitamaa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [luokkataistelu] Nigeria paralysed by General strike

Nigeria paralysed by General strike

Government attacks unions
Nigeria has been paralysed by a general strike called by the Nigerian Labour
Congress (NLC, the country's main trade union federation).

Reports in the Nigerian capitalist media show that the strike, which
commenced on 16th January, 2002, was generally successful throughout the
country. Government offices, industries, banks, markets and shops were shut.
Most private and public vehicles are off the road and streets are deserted.
Going by newspaper reports, it is in only one state (Kogi) out of the 36
states of the country that it was reported the strike was not observed on
the first day.

The NLC leaders called the strike to compel the government to reverse an
almost 20% increment on the prices of domestically consumed petroleum
products announced on New Year day. According to the government, the
increase marks the beginning of the "liberalisation" of the petroleum
marketing industry in which "market forces" will dictate prices. The IMF,
World Bank and Nigeria's external creditors have always insisted that
domestic fuel in Nigeria is too cheap and have always demanded increases as
a condition for agreement on the country's $32 billion external debt.

As in the past, the increase has led to a 50-100% jump in transport fares in
both rural and urban areas; inflation rate will go up and standard of living
further undermined. Remarkably, on the first day of the strike, the Obasanjo
government also announced the details of the third phase of the country's
privatisation programme. This involves the sale of the country's electricity
corporation (NEPA), national airline, seaports, and twenty other public
companies

This massive response to the strike call shows the depth of the anger of the
masses against the fuel price hike and the devastating effects of other
neo-liberal policies of the Obasanjo regime. Two and a half years after the
end of military rule, the working masses could not see any improvement in
their living standards. On the contrary, conditions are getting worse for
the most impoverished sections of the population. This is the second
increase in fuel price since Obasanjo came to power in May 1999. In June
2000, the regime raised petrol price from N20 to N30 per litre. It took a
5-day general strike before the price was reduced to N22.

Nigeria is renowned for ethnic and religious conflicts. But the success of
the strike proves the capacity of the labour movement to cut across ethnic
and religious cleavages among the working people, uniting them around a
common working class cause.

Repression
On the first day of the strike, the police arrested the NLC president, Adams
Oshiomhole, Dipo Fashina (president of Academic Staff Union of Universities,
ASUU) and eight other trade union leaders while they were addressing workers
at the federal government secretariat at Abuja. They were subsequently
charged to court, accused of "criminal conspiracy, inciting disturbance,
disturbance of public peace and unlawful assembly".. The magistrate released
them on bail and adjourned the case to 19th February, 2002. But on the
second day of the strike, Adams and some other labour leaders were
re-arrested in Abuja.

The same day, the Obasanjo government got an Abuja high court to declare the
strike illegal. This would open the way for Adams and other labour activists
to be charged with contempt of court and for workers to be intimidated and
victimised. A newspaper reported that not less than 83 people were arrested
across the country on the first day of the strike.

Among those arrested was Demola Yaya, Labour Organiser for Democratic
Socialist Movement (DSM), Nigerian section of the Committee for A Workers'
International (CWI), and a member of Mobilisation Committee set by the NLC.
He was arrested while addressing a crowd comprising youth and members of the
local community. The policemen forcefully dispersed the crowd and seized the
megaphone being used by Demola and several copies of the DSM newspaper
produced for the strike. He was detained for several hours.

Earlier, on 7th January, policemen in Abeokuta, Ogun State, arrested two
students of University of Agriculture, Abeokuta during a protest organised
by the Zone D of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS)
against the fuel price increase. The arrested students are: Ahmed Adesina (a
member of DSM) and Shina Onifade (a member of National Voice of Democrats).
The two student activists have been charged with "civil disturbance" and the
case has been adjourned by the court to 11th February, 2002.

DSM intervention
Members of Democratic Socialist Movement (DSM), Nigerian section of the
Committee for A Workers' International (CWI), were involved in the
"stay-at-home" strike in two areas in Lagos yesterday. In Agege, 211 copies
of the special edition of the paper were sold while comrades in Ajegunle
sold 291 copies. DSM branches outside Lagos also intervened in the strike in
their areas. DSM members are intervening in at least 12 towns. Earlier, on
14th January, 84 copies of the paper were sold at a planning meeting held at
the NLC headquarters in Lagos.

But a DSM rally scheduled for 17th January, 2002, in Lagos to mobilise
support for the strike was stopped by the police. Just like our anti-war,
anti-terrorism rally that was scuttled by the state in October 2001, the
venue of the planned rally was taken over by a contingent of 15 armed
policemen who said they have instructions to stop the rally, to prevent
"disturbance", according to them. Faced with this situation, we decided to
go inside the community where we sold 23 copies of the paper.

The DSM is campaigning for the release of all the detained workers and
labour leaders, an end to all cases against activists and a stop to state
repression of the trade unions and socialists. We are also demanding for
respect for freedom of assembly and association, right to hold rallies and
other democratic rights.

Above all, we are campaigning for the working class to have its on
independent political party which should fight against the anti-poor
neo-liberal policies being implemented by all the country's capitalist
parties and which will implement socialist policies when it comes to power.

Segun Sango, General Secretary DSM, Lagos.
17th January, 2002


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