NLC and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) have extended the ultimatum issued to CBN to make cash available in banks by two weeks.
The two unions had earlier threatened in a one-week ultimatum to picket all branches of the CBN beginning from March 29 if President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime and the CBN did not end the nationwide cash crunch.
NLC president, Joe Ajaero, told a news conference in Abuja that the decision to extend the ultimatum was reached after consultations with affiliate members of both unions and their national executive councils.
He said reports from state branches of the two unions indicated partial compliance by the CBN with the Supreme Court judgment to make cash available in banks.
“We agreed that we have to monitor this compliance for the next two weeks to establish whether it is sustainable.
CBN rushed to move money to commercial banks, but some of the banks are getting empty again. Queues are returning to some of them,” stated Mr Ajaero.
He added;
“It will be very naive of the NLC to hurriedly call off the action. We would want to loosen up for another two weeks, however. The NLC and TUC have decided to allow March 29 to pass without any picketing but to watch for the next two weeks.”
He explained that “after two weeks from today, the NEC of the two organisations will meet to decide whether the CBN has fully complied and whether its compliance is sustainable to drive the economy.”
The NLC president said committees had been set up at the national and state levels of the two organisations to monitor the level of compliance by the banks.
He also observed that some banks did not comply with the CBN directive to operate at the weekend.
“We equally wish to advise the CBN to play its regulatory role because it can sanction banks that are not compliant as Nigerians have suffered so much,’’ Mr Ajaero said.
TUC president Festus Osifo corroborated Mr Ajaero’s submission that the labour unions had agreed to sustain the push in the next two weeks to ease the hardships of Nigerians.
“With reports that came from the states, there had been some level of compliance, but some banks refused to comply or refused to open, and they did not open at the weekend,” stated Mr Osifo.
“We call on the CBN to encourage them to sustain the availability of cash as the confidence in the system has been eroded. The CBN needs to do much more. It needs to supply much more money into the economy.”