TVC Mass Sack: Labour Kicks, Vows To Take Action

[caption id="attachment_20817" align="alignnone" width="800"]Bobboi Kaigama, TUC President [/caption]

Labour leaders on Saturday described the sack of 145 workers by Continental Broadcast Services Ltd (CBS) as embarrassing and unnecessary.`

CBS is the owner of Television Continental (TVC) and Radio Continental.

Labour leaders who spoke to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) condemned the mass lay-off.

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The president of Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC), Bobboi Kaigama, condemned the sack and said the organised labour would look into it soon.

”The leaders of the NLC and TUC are in Geneva for the International Labour Organisation conference. We will take action on it when we return,” Mr. Kaigama said.

Also, TUC Secretary General, Musa Lawal, told NAN that the number of workers sacked was unacceptable because it would increase the level of poverty already suffered by the people.

Mr. Lawal said it was not proper for the private sector employer to sack that number of workers at once over little economic shakeup while expatriates are retained and paid in hard currency.

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He said the organised labour leaders would look into the issue when they returned from the ILO conference.

Deji Elumoye, chairman, Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Lagos State, said the sack was unnecessary and embarrassing to the nation.

According to Mr. Elumoye, the sack was uncalled for especially at a time when media houses, including TVC, are under-staffed.

”In most media houses, journalists are overworked. One person covers two to three beats and now they have been sacked. It is unacceptable”, he said.

The NUJ chairman said CBS had the right to hire and fire but should have endeavoured to pay workers their entitlements before issuing the sack letters.

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He said the sack was a wrong way to celebrate the organisation’s 10 years anniversary achieved by the workers.

He said the organisation should have restructured the management level such as the expatriates who are being paid in dollars rather than sack 80 per cent of the journalists.

However, the CBS management in a statement said the sack was necessitated by the need to restructure the organisation.

Regina Whenu, Associate Consultant to CBS who signed the statement, said, “This restructuring is geared toward repositioning the business for better and greater delivery of services to audiences and advertisers alike.”

She added that the winding up of TVC Africa would allow the company concentrate on key areas of business which include TVC news, TVC Entertainment and Radio Continental.

He said the board of directors had approved a generous severance package for the affected staff, in addition to a programme of assistance to enable them to secure new employment.

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