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Minimum Wage: FG, States Owing Workers Two Months, Says NLC

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President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, on Thursday, said both federal and states were owing workers two months since the last minimum wage expired.

Ajaero who was a guest on Channels Television’s Politics Today, said the last minimum wage elapsed by April 18.

“The last minimum wage expired by April 18th. They started owing by April, then May, June. We don’t have the luxury of time,” he said.

“We equally have to be meticulous, patient which is what we are doing now to make sure that we pass through the whole process. We believe that this is the last level where we are now in consulting with Mr President as the father of the nation.”

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N250,000 Demand

When asked if the labour unions will give President Bola Tinubu till the end of July to meet the union’s demand of N250,000, Ajaero didn’t stipulate a timeframe.

He said the unions will meet next week and present their discussions to their respective organs before knowing the next step.

On June 3, the NLC and TUC embarked on a nationwide strike over the failure of the Federal Government to agree to their demand for the minimum wage.

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The labour bodies proposed N494,000 as the new minimum wage, citing inflation and the prevailing economic hardship in the country while rejecting the federal government’s N60,000 offer.

On June 7, the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) said a N60,000 minimum wage would prove unsustainable.

At the last meeting of the tripartite committee set up to negotiate the minimum wage, labour rejected the N62,000 proposed by the government and lowered its demand to N250,000.

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Senate queries NNPCL auditors over N210trn unreconciled figures

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Senate Public Accounts Committee has issued a one-week ultimatum to external auditors of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) to account for more than N210 trillion in unreconciled figures contained in the company’s audited financial statements.

It said that auditors, who certified the accounts, could not evade responsibility for defending them.

The committee, chaired by Ibrahim Dankwambo, handed down the directive on Wednesday after a tense hearing during which lawmakers rejected repeated attempts by the auditors to refer questions back to the NNPCL, insisting that the figures they signed off on must be fully explained.

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At the heart of the controversy are N107 trillion recorded as receivables and N103 trillion listed as payables in the company’s audited accounts.

The lawmakers said the figures remain unexplained because neither the NNPCL nor its auditors had produced schedules identifying the transactions, counterparties or calculations behind them.

The auditors, however, informed the committee that the supporting schedules formed part of their working papers and requested about two weeks to retrieve the documents.

The request was firmly rejected.

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Dankwambo questioned why auditors, who had certified the accounts, could not immediately produce documents supporting the figures.

When you have figures in audited financial statements, there must be schedules showing exactly how those figures were derived. If those schedules already exist in your working papers, why do you need additional time before presenting them to this committee?” he queried.

But the audit firm said that the NNPCL remained its client and that detailed explanations should ordinarily come from the company, recalling that during an earlier hearing, lawmakers had agreed that NNPCL officials would explain the figures.

That position drew sharp criticism from the committee.

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The committee said that NNPCL, being wholly owned by the Federal Government on behalf of Nigerians, could not invoke commercial secrecy to shield information from the Parliament.

“NNPCL belongs to the Nigerian people, not to private shareholders. Parliament has every constitutional right to examine its accounts, and no confidentiality agreement can override that responsibility,” a lawmaker said.

The auditors were thereafter discharged and directed to reappear before the committee within one week with the requested documentation.

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Just in: Court Orders Final Forfeiture of Achimugu’s N9bn Assets to FG

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Justice Jude Onwugbuzie of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court sitting in Apo, Abuja, has ordered the final forfeiture of assets linked to Kogi-born businesswoman, Aisha Achimugu, to the Federal Government.

The assets include jewellery valued at N4.645 billion, 11 exotic vehicles worth N4.293 billion, $50,000 in cash, and N30 million.
The ruling was delivered on Thursday, July 16, 2026, following months of legal proceedings after the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) applied for the final forfeiture of the assets.

Justice Onwugbuzie held that the EFCC had successfully proved its case and consequently ordered the immediate and final forfeiture of the jewellery valued at N4,645,170,294.09, the 11 exotic vehicles worth N4,293,000,000, $50,000, and N30 million in cash to the Federal Government.

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Court orders parties to maintain status quo in Benue APC leadership suit

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By Francesca Hangeior

Justice Inyang Ekwo of the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja on Thursday ordered the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to maintain the status quo pending the determination of a suit instituted by Hon. (Engr.) Sesugh Kaaba.

Justice Ekwo gave the order after parties informed the court that they had exchanged processes in the suit, prompting the court to hold that issues had already been joined on the substantive matter.

The suit, marked FHC/ABJ/CS/1429/2026, was filed by Kaaba against the APC and INEC.

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At the resumed hearing, counsel to the plaintiff, Mohammed Ndarani Mohammed, told the court that the matter was scheduled for the defendants to show cause why the reliefs sought in the plaintiff’s ex parte application should not be granted.

According to the judge, both defendants had complied with the court’s earlier order by filing affidavits to show cause, adding that the plaintiff had received and was ready to respond to the processes.

Counsel to the APC, S. D. Swem, confirmed that the party had filed its affidavit to show cause and a counter-affidavit to the motion on notice, but said its response to the originating summons was yet to be filed.

On his part, counsel to INEC, Oluwole Olukunle, informed the court that the commission had responded to all the processes filed by the plaintiff.

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Justice Ekwo observed that by filing their respective processes, the parties had submitted to the court’s jurisdiction and joined issues on the substantive case.

The judge cautioned that once a matter is pending before a court, parties must refrain from taking steps capable of altering the subject matter of the litigation.

“Once a case is pending in court, parties are automatically restrained and if you go ahead to do any other thing, you are taking the law into your hands,” the judge said.

Counsel to the plaintiff thereafter urged the court to caution the APC against taking further actions while the suit was pending.

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Justice Ekwo, however, clarified that he was merely stating the legal position and not giving advice to any of the parties.

In a brief ruling, the judge held that since parties had already joined issues on the substantive suit, it would serve the interest of justice to proceed with the hearing of the main case rather than expend judicial time on the pending ex parte application.
He subsequently adjourned the matter until July 21 for hearing and ordered all parties to maintain the status quo ante pending the determination of the suit.

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