The Nigerian Labour Congress ( NLC) and other labour leaders have called on Cross River State Governor, Prince Bassey Edet Otu, to expedite action on payment of all outstanding salaries as well as pensions in the interest of civil servants in the state.
The Congress also called on the governor to carry out promotions of deserving workers, even as they praised the governor for carrying out interventions for workers in the state.
It would be recalled that on Thursday, April 30, the administrator of Governor Otu carried out a groundbreaking ceremony of 1,000 units of housing estate at Akpabuyo local government area, an exercise that excited labour leaders.
Speaking at the event, NLC State Chairman, Comrade Olayi Gregory, urged workers to use the day for more than celebration.
“Today, we gather not merely in celebration, but in sober reflection,” describing Workers Day as a time “when the dignity of labour is recognised and interrogated.”
He stressed that this year’s observance was “written in sweat, anxiety, and shrinking hopes of the average Cross River worker.”
On security, Olayi said, “No economy can scale sustainably when insecurity has become ambient,” he stated.
He noted that workers now face threats “from highways to their communities, from workplaces to farmlands”, stressing that a worker living in fear cannot produce at full capacity.
Decrying the economic hardship, NLC chairman said, “Our monthly salaries are helpless against rising cost of living, stressing that Inflation has hollowed out incomes, leaving many workers in a paradox where employment no longer guarantees survival, let alone dignity.”
He disclosed that labour had issued “a final 7-day ultimatum to the government on November 30, 2025”, but suspended it “to allow the government a final window to act in good faith.”
Olayi listed 14 unresolved issues affecting workers in the state. Among them, he highlighted “the non-implementation of promotions since 2016”, which has “left workers stagnated, demoralised, and financially shortchanged.”
Other grievances included “non-harmonisation of pensions in line with the new national minimum wage,” “the failure to pay gratuities to retirees,” and “the distorted implementation of the ₦70,000 national minimum wage, which deviates from the template mutually agreed upon between the government and labour in December 2024.
The union further demanded an end to the “planned breach of the Harmonised Retirement Age for Teachers Act, 2022,” and called for full consolidation of the “15% salary review for health workers” with basic salary.
“Agreements are not suggestions; they are binding frameworks for trust,” Olayi warned.
He added, “Decent work is not a privilege, it is a right,” and cautioned that labour would “explore all legitimate avenues” if the demands remain unresolved.
Responding, Cross River state Governor Bassey Otu, who was represented by his deputy, Rt. Hon. Peter Odey said his administration is anchored on a “people first” mantra and would do everything possible to give workers relief.
“When workers who are the power engine and drive the machinery of government are not happy, their success becomes difficult to achieve,” the governor said.
He thanked the workforce for their “dogged determination to sustain industrial harmony,” noting that “in Cross River State, May Day is now a day of reflection, appreciation, and stock-taking of the immeasurable contribution of our workers.”
While highlighting ongoing intervention for civil servants, Otu said, “300 civil servants train monthly in ICT capacity building,” while “200 civil servants have been trained and certified in health, safety and environmental management.”
He added that all government offices have been connected to public power supply and that “50 hectares of land in each of the three senatorial districts” have been allocated for a civil servants’ housing scheme, with “1,000 units in the South Senatorial district already under construction.”
On welfare, he affirmed that “salary and pension remain a top priority” and announced that “the next set of gratuity payments will be done in a couple of weeks.”
Addressing labour’s concerns, he stated, “My administration implemented a reverse hierarchy structure across the state,” and promised to “review the matter further” regarding health workers’ retirement age.
