Aviation trade unions have suspended their industrial action against Caverton Helicopters over alleged anti-labour practices.
Mr Olayinka Abioye, General Secretary, the National Union of Air
Transport Employees (NUATE), confirmed the development in an interview
with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Lagos.
Abioye said the unions had suspended the action following an
invitation by the airline’s management to them to come for a meeting.
SOURCES:-http://guardian.ngHe said: “Now we are preparing for a meeting with the management and we are looking forward to an amicable resolution of the issues on ground.
“Our main demand is the conclusion of the ongoing discussion on salary increment and conditions of service.
“When we complete that, we will now go to the next one which is the management’s plan to disengage certain numbers of staff.
“We are hoping that we will be able to apply the conditions of
service which we would have signed as the benchmark to determine the
conditions on which those affected are to go, if they have to go.”
NAN reports that the NUATE and the Air Transport Services Senior
Staff Association of Nigeria(ATSSSAN) had on Thursday picketed the
airline’s premises at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.
The members of both unions, while chanting various solidarity songs,
barred workers and clients of the airline from entering the company’s
premises for several hours.
They had flayed the decision of the Caverton’s management to declare
150 workers redundant in view of the current economic situation in the
country.
According to them, the affected workers were paid only a month salary
in lieu of notice despite some of them having spent up to 13 years in
the airline’s service.
However, Caverton had in a letter addressed to the NUATE, which was
sighted by NAN, claimed that the sacking of the workers was based on the
review of its operational exigency and economic climate in the country.
The letter dated Oct.28 and signed by the airline’s Industrial
Relation Manager, Mr Segun Alebiosu, said the move was in accordance
with Section 20 of the Nigeria Labour Act.
It said the affected workers were offered accrued salary up to the
effective date, one month salary in lieu of notice and contributory
pension up to the last full month.