About 1,444 Exxon-Mobil’s workers who were relieved of their jobs
have called on the company to pay them their agreed terminal benefits.
Addressing journalists in Abuja at the weekend, the workers also urged the National Assembly to intervene in efforts to persuade the company to pay them their terminal benefits.
They accused the oil company of violating their rights and inflicting
injustice on them by denying them their N11.4 billion entitlements.
In a speech read on behalf of the workers by the Registrar of the International Institute for Humanitarian and Environmental Law, Mr Cyprian Edward-Ekpo, the workers said the relative peace in the Niger Delta would be threatened if the company failed to pay them their entitlements.
In a speech read on behalf of the workers by the Registrar of the International Institute for Humanitarian and Environmental Law, Mr Cyprian Edward-Ekpo, the workers said the relative peace in the Niger Delta would be threatened if the company failed to pay them their entitlements.
They said that the action of the firm was a gross violation of human/labour rights of the people.
The workers said alleged that a peaceful protest by them to press home
their demand was thwarted by the management of the Exxon-Mobil who
sponsored the police to harass, arrest and torture them.
According to them, the action of the international firm undermines the
federal government’s efforts that had led to the current relative peace
in the Niger-Delta region.
They said: “It is highly despicable and condemnable that a service
contract worker who has worked for Exxon-Mobil for over thirty years was
offered N150,000 as end of service benefit.
“May we quickly add that some members of this group were previously
involved in militancy in the Niger Delta region, but as a result of the
amnesty programme and transformation agenda of the federal government,
they laid down arms and engaged in meaningful occupation.
“The consequences of Exxon-Mobil action by refusing to pay them their
rightful entitlement shall certainly lead some of them to return to the
creeks with its attendant negative consequences on the economy of the
country.”
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