Monday, December 3, 2007

IFJ Outraged Shut Down of Nigeria’s Guardian Newspaper as Management Tries to Break Strike

IFJ Outraged Shut Down of Nigeria’s Guardian Newspaper
By: IFJ

Posted on: 11/20/2007

IFJ Outraged Shut Down of Nigeria’s Guardian Newspaper as Management Tries to Break Strike

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today condemned the move by management at the Guardian newspaper to end a 12-day strike by shutting down the newspaper and dismissing all its employees.

The journalists and the other workers at the paper have been on strike since November 8 after negotiations with managers over a pay raise and better working conditions stalled. The Guardian online and print editions have not been published since then.

“We are outraged by the strike-breaking technique used by The Guardian management,” said Gabriel Baglo, Director of the IFJ Africa office. “Closing the paper and reopening it later with a new staff is an unfair labour practice that only aims to break the union and undermine workers’ rights. We call on the management to resume negotiation with the workers to negotiate a fair contract.”

The Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) in a letter sent to the Federal Minister of Labour on November 16 urged him to “intervene directly and immediately” in the dispute between the workers and the management of The Guardian.

The IFJ backs the call of its affiliate the NUJ for the government to take strong action to protect the newspaper employees’ rights, including referring the dispute to the Industrial Arbitration Panel to “save the jobs of about 800 journalists and other workers.”

The Guardian management announced to our in-house members that they will close down the paper with effect from Friday and sack all our members,” Usman Leman, NUJ National Secretary told the IFJ.

The NUJ members and other workers at the newspaper demanded a 50 per cent pay rise, improvement of the computer and Internet system and provision of a staff bus. The talks started in March of this year and were broke down on November 6.

According to the NUJ’s letter to the Minister, the workers agreed to resume work two days later, agreeing to accept 20 per cent pay rise. The management responded by refusing to put any agreements on other issues in dispute in writing and then locked out the NUJ members, the union said.

Taken from mediaforfreedom.com

1 comment:

zen said...

Based on the statement released by the Guardian newspaper all the allegations contained in this version are false. The newspaper has 25 years of credibility behind it, and its reputation speaks for itself, therefore I find this version hard to swallow. I went looking for the other side of the story and this is it. The Guardian in an attempt to evade the reasonable conditions set forth by the Union decided to shut down and fire all its workers...over 800 journalists? This is not very likely. In the statement released by the Guardian, (found in the post below this one) it defended itself eloquently and fervently, and now I understand what from.