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Up NEPA!!! As human rights group calls for trial of electricity workers for terrorism

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The Citizens Advocacy for Social & Economic Rights (CASER) has called for the arrest and trial of electricity workers for acts of terrorism after the national power supply grid was shut down on Wednesday by the Nigerian Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE).

Many parts of Nigeria were still awaiting power supply restoration more than 12 hours after the workers suspended their strike for two weeks.

But in Abuja, at about 1:30 p.m. Power supply was restored after about 28 hours, amid feeble shouts of Up NEPA, a regular sing-song in the days of the moribund National Electric Power Authority (NEPA).

The General Manager, Public Affairs of TCN, Mrs Ndidi Mbah confirmed the shut down of the national grid in Abuja and said the company was set to restore the grid as quickly as possible.

Mrs Mbah disclosed that several 330kV transmission lines and 33 Kilo Volt (kV) feeder-lines across the power system network were switched off by the electricity workers.

”This resulted in generation-load imbalance and multiple voltage escalations at critical stations and substations,” Mbah stated.

She said that this was coming weeks after the company had come out of  hectic grid management regime, occasioned by paucity of generation that lingered for a couple of months

In a statement titled, CALL TO ARREST AND PROSECUTE ELECTRICITY UNION WORKERS FOR ACTS OF TERRORISM, the group’s Executive Director, Barrister Frank Tietie, explains why:

“The Citizens Advocacy for Social & Economic Rights (CASER) has since 2014 been at the forefront of calling for proper legal action against trade unions in Nigeria which embark on illegal strike actions, especially in the essential services sectors of health and education.

2. It is criminal by the provisions of Section 31 (6) of the Trade Unions Act for workers in the essential services sector to embark on strike actions, but the failure of successive administrations to deal with this mindless criminality has led to the present worsening and highly embarrassing situation where even electricity workers have now decided to disregard the law by embarking on debilitating strike action on the 17th of August 2022. Thus, irrespective of the propriety or genuineness of the demands of any Nigerian workers union, they are barred by Nigerian law from embarking on strike actions if they are engaged in the provision of essential services.

3. There is a reason why the National Assembly of Nigeria in 2005 outlawed strikes in the essential services sector. It is not unconnected with the fragility of the Nigerian society and other related problems which are fundamental to the well-being of the Nigerian people. Thus, in that short period for which power generation and distribution were wholly shut down in Nigeria, the electricity union succeeded in inflicting untold hardships on Nigerians and caused losses in the billions of Naira to Nigerian businesses. This is unacceptable!

4. What the electricity workers who went on strike have failed to realise is that their strike action on the 17th of August, 2022 amounted to an act of terrorism against the Nigerian State and that they are therefore liable to be punished with life imprisonment on conviction according to the combined provisions of Section 1 of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act (as Amended) which defines an “act of terrorism” to include any act deliberately done with malice, aforethought and which :

(a) may seriously harm or damage a country or an international organization ;

(b) is intended or can reasonably be regarded as having been intended to—
i unduly compel a government or international organization to perform or abstain from performing any act;

ii. seriously intimidate a population ;

iii. seriously destabilise, or destroy the fundamental political, constitutional, economic ( social structures of a country or an international organization ; or,

iv) otherwise influence such government or international organisation by intimidation or coercion; and
c . involves , as the case may be, the interference with or disruption of the supply of water, power or any other fundamental natural resource, the effect of which is to endanger human life.

4. To the above end, the electricity workers cannot be excused by the exception in subsection 3 of the above section as they embarked on the strike for coercion.

5. What the electricity workers have done is not different from acts by a terrorist group such as Boko Haram. Therefore, it is only appropriate to institute criminal proceedings against them to serve as deterrence to other unions in the essential services sector that may contemplate any illegal strikes.

6. If electricity workers can embark on strikes, then members of the Nigerian Police and military- Army, Navy and Airforce can also embark on strike actions. Such a situation is unimaginable. That is why the law prohibits such strike actions.

7. Therefore, dear Honourable Attorney General, your failure to enforce the legal standards as to illegal strikes as in the tradition of past administrations which, for reasons of lack of political will, failed to act in the public interest, will lead to the further expansion of the reign of impunity which has been the bane of Nigeria’s fragile democracy.

8. TAKE NOTICE, therefore, that CASER shall continue to engage your office in this matter in the hope that decisive actions will be taken against illegal strikes in Nigeria. Where necessary, it shall secure an appropriate order of a court of competent jurisdiction to ensure compliance with the above standards set in Nigerian criminal law.”

 

Frank Tietie
Executive Director

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