Bits of Naija

  • Home
  • Bits of Naija

Bits of Naija News. Information. Fun. Life. From Giant of Africa

Diddy risks over 11 years in jail, prosecutors push for sentence
01/10/2025

Diddy risks over 11 years in jail, prosecutors push for sentence

Nigeria News Politics Business

Don’t confess if you cheat, Teju Babyface advises men on infidelity
01/10/2025

Don’t confess if you cheat, Teju Babyface advises men on infidelity

Nigeria News Politics Business

01/10/2025

NUPENG DUES IS N7,000 NOT N54,000.

By Owei Lakemfa.

I have, given my experience as a retired labour leader, journalist, patriot and human rights activist, risen in the last few weeks to defend the fundamental rights of workers in the oil industry.

I did this because I cannot fold my hands as Dangote Plc dumps huge funds on the mass and social media in a desperate attempt to bury the truth. This is part of its attempts to overwhelm the country and hold Nigerians hostage as it seeks to impose a monopoly on the country as regards petroleum products.

I have sought only to present facts and, demolish the mountain of lies heaped on the country by Dangote Plc.

Consequently, I have been bombarded by fellow Nigerians with questions over which they want clarification as they search for the truth. I have been glad to provide this on individual and collective basis.

This has included debunking the initial lies by Dangote that the workers do not want to belong to legal unions. If these were true, the workers would not have voluntarily joined NUPENG and PENGASSAN and, in any case, Dangote would not have needed to sack over 800 workers for belonging to the unions.

Let me at this point, address an issue raised by some concerned Nigerians who have been deliberately misinformed that NUPENG charges N54,O00 as Union dues.

First, let me explain that Union dues are legitimate and that workers who are members of each union, decide the dues to pay. In other words, such dues are arrived at based on completely democratic processes.

Contrary to the falsehood that the union dues collected by NUPENG is N54,000 for a 45,000-litre fuel truck, the union dues is actually N7,000.

Secondly, based on collective bargaining and agreement with the truck owners, there are a plethora of other dues totaling N12,000 paid in the overall interest of the tanker drivers. These cover HMO Health Insurance for each driver provided through Leadway Health Insurance.

There is Accident Insurance for each driver as he carries inflammable materials over long distances.
Equally, quarterly training and retraining per zone is organized for each driver with the Federal Road Safety Corps, Police, Fire Service, State VIO and other traffick enforcement agencies in order to reduce oil tanker accidents on our roads. This N12,000 also covers the hiring of vigilante and, payment for security agents to provide security for all tanker drivers across the country so they do not fall victims of bandits, truck hijackers or community/local government toughies who try to impose local fees on fuel tankers.

PTD - NUPENG union dues is N7,000 and it is a loading system, which means payment is made only when the fuel tanker is loaded and, payment is made by the Truck Owner based on the Collective Bargaining Agreement between the PTD-NUPENG ( employee union) and the Nigeria Association of Road Transport Owners ( Employers Association).

Please, if you want any clarification on this NUPENG/PENGASSAN faceoff with Dangote Plc, send it and I will go out of my way as a journalist to fact check and provide you the facts. The only thing I ask for is a cultured interaction not name calling or insults against labour or Dangote and his company.
My respects to all.

01/10/2025

*THE COMING DEATH OF NUPENG*

A storm is gathering over one of Nigeria’s most powerful labour unions, and the thunderclap may soon bring its roof down.

Once upon a time, the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) wore the robe of a fearless defender of workers’ rights. Today, it is accused of having shed that robe, donned a silk agbada, and recast itself as a cartel, a cabal fattened on levies, intimidation, and extortion.

The elders of the Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD), the very backbone of the union, are no longer whispering; they are shouting from the rooftops, demanding the resignation of NUPENG’s president, Comrade Williams Akporeha, and his general secretary, Comrade Afolabi Olawale. Their charge sheet reads like the script of a Nollywood political thriller: corruption, abuse of office, intimidation, and dragging a once-respected body into national ridicule.

But scratch beneath the drama and you’ll find a darker truth: NUPENG no longer behaves like a union. It behaves like a cartel, holding Nigeria’s fuel supply by the throat while sipping champagne in first class jets.

The list of sins is long: harassment of drivers, defiance of court orders, illegal levies at depots, and the conscription of members into street-level enforcers. Its notorious N39,000 “gate fee” per tanker truck imposed without law, regulation, or shame generates billions. A hidden tax. A shadow treasury. None of it declared, none of it accountable.

Let’s do the maths. One fuel truck carries 33,000 litres. At N39,000 per truck, that’s about N1.18 slapped on every litre. Nigeria consumes roughly 50 million litres daily. That means NUPENG rakes in N59 million a day, N1.8 billion a month, nearly N22 billion a year, money that does not enter the nation’s coffers.

At gas terminals, it is even worse. Members of the Nigeria Liquefied and Compressed Gases Association (NLCGA) complain of paying N72,000 per truck before loading. That’s another N3 billion in a year’s sweep, diverted straight into the union’s opaque vaults.

This isn’t trade unionism. It is armed robbery with an invoice.

Is the future ready for you?
Schiller International
by TaboolaSponsored Links
And yet, the greatest tragedy is reserved for the tanker drivers themselves—the men whose sweat and spilled blood lubricate the nation’s fuel economy.

They drive rickety trucks on death-trap highways. They battle fatigue, accidents, fires, and the daily gamble of survival. For this, they get no pension, no insurance, no fallback plan. Should calamity strike, they are discarded like worn tyres. NUPENG has no plan for them.

Worse still, instead of protection, they are harassed by touts waving NUPENG’s banner, squeezed for levies on every highway corner. How many of NUPENG’s executives have ever driven a tanker across Ore or Lokoja? None. Yet from their air-conditioned offices, they send men into the storm while they themselves float in SUVs, private jets, and international conferences, often with mistresses in tow, not the drivers they claim to represent.

As if that were not enough, NUPENG also deducts 1% of members’ salaries as dues. Millions vanish monthly. Who audits these accounts? No one. Perhaps it is time the Registrar of Trade Unions or better yet, the EFCC asked to see the books. But if history is any guide, NUPENG’s response will be as predictable as a badly written film: call a strike, threaten to collapse the economy, and hide its fear of accountability beneath the flag of “workers’ rights.”

The danger is not abstract. With one strike or blockade, NUPENG can paralyse the nation. This looming threat casts a dark shadow over the Dangote Petroleum Refinery, a $20 billion lifeline meant to end fuel importation and stabilise the energy market. If NUPENG’s extortion machinery hijacks Dangote’s planned 10,000-strong truck fleet, the dream could curdle into a nightmare. A single month of disruption could bleed Nigeria of $1.3 billion.

Yet, change is brewing. A new generation of tanker drivers is rising, no longer content to be pawns in the games of union barons. Led by men like Lucky Osesua, Dayyabu Garga, and Dr Humble Obinna Power, they are calling for reform, not of faces alone, but of the very soul of the union.

The International Labour Organization (ILO) is clear: union membership must be voluntary, not coerced. NUPENG’s chokehold on workers and businesses mocks Convention 87 on Freedom of Association. Where the ILO envisions freedom, NUPENG enforces fear. Where it preaches transparency, NUPENG practises racketeering.

Can a cartel be reformed? Can intimidation be digitised? Can extortion be given a fresh coat of paint and rebranded as “union service charge”? Every litre of fuel sold in Nigeria today bears an invisible tax, not levied by government but by a handful of union mandarins fattened on impunity.

That is not unionism. That is criminality dressed in overalls.

The end of NUPENG in its current form is not a matter of if, but when. The masquerade has danced too long in the market square. Nigerians deserve a union that defends labour, not one that weaponises it. The Registrar of Trade Unions, the Ministry of Labour, and anti-corruption bodies must summon the courage to break this cartel before it sabotages the nation further.

NUPENG’s fall will not be a tragedy. It will be a cleansing.

26/09/2025
20/09/2025

Copied from the FB page of Idris Olayemi.

“For the first time today, I realized that the problem of Nigeria is not leadership per say, but the opportunists nature of its citizens.

I was scheduled for an appointment at the Russian Embassy Abuja by 11am today, and somehow, I missed my way to the Embassy. Instead of the Russian Embassy, I found myself at the UN Office which had the same structure painting with the Russian Embassy. I checked my time and it was 10:42am. Looking frustrated, I asked for directions and the security guards directed me to a cluster of Taxi Drivers at the opposite side. I crossed to the other side and immediately about five of the Taxi Drivers rushed towards me.

"Oga where you dey go"? They asked simultaneously

"Russian Embassy" I responded

"Ahhhhh! Russian Embassy. E far o" one of the men responded.

"Is about two hours drive from here" the man added

"How much will you take me there"? I asked

"Oga na 30k o" he responded

My heart skip.

I was pleading and negotiating with this man to please accept 20k as I was running out of time but he stood his ground.

A Hausa man hawking orange who was following our conversation, came behind me and whispered in Hausa "Dan dai kana sauri ne, Amman akasama zaka iya zuwa Russian Embassy" (if not because you are in a haste, you can trek to Russian Embassy).

The orange hawker then instructed me to follow him. I checked my time and it was 10:49am.

We trekked few miles, take just two turns and crossed over an overhead bridge. Boom! We are at the front of Russian Embassy.

I checked my time and it was 10:57am. I could not help but hug the man tightly until the orange on his stray start falling. We chatted for few minutes. He told me he came all the way from Ingawa Local Government in Katsina State. I told him I am from Funtua local government in Katsina State. We quickly exchange contact and I dash off.

While waiting for my turn to be invited into the Embassy, my mind traveled back to the Taxi Driver I was desperately begging to accept 20k. Some of us are worse than the leaders we complain everyday about. It's just opportunity we lack.

Ismail Abdulazeez Mantu
Diary of a Traveler”

Afro Beat Icon urges youths to stay and rebuild Nigeria
18/09/2025

Afro Beat Icon urges youths to stay and rebuild Nigeria

Nigeria News Politics Business

Seyi Tinubu can challenge his father for president – Bwala
18/09/2025

Seyi Tinubu can challenge his father for president – Bwala

Nigeria News Politics Business

'The bombing has been insane': Palestinians scramble to flee Israeli assault on Gaza City
17/09/2025

'The bombing has been insane': Palestinians scramble to flee Israeli assault on Gaza City

Nigeria News Politics Business

Rivers: Hopes, mixed views as emergency ends tomorrow
17/09/2025

Rivers: Hopes, mixed views as emergency ends tomorrow

Nigeria News Politics Business

STATEHOUSE STATEMENTSTATEMENT BY HIS EXCELLENCY, BOLA AHMED TINUBU, PRESIDENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, ON THE...
17/09/2025

STATEHOUSE STATEMENT

STATEMENT BY HIS EXCELLENCY, BOLA AHMED TINUBU, PRESIDENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA, ON THE CESSATION OF THE STATE OF EMERGENCY IN RIVERS STATE

My Fellow countrymen and, in particular, the good people of Rivers State.

I am happy to address you today on the state of emergency declaration in Rivers State. You will recall that on 18th March, 2025, I proclaimed a state of emergency in the state. In my proclamation address, I highlighted the reasons for the declaration. The summary of it for context is that there was a total paralysis of governance in Rivers State, which had led to the Governor of Rivers State and the House of Assembly being unable to work together. Critical economic assets of the State, including oil pipelines, were being vandalised. The State House of Assembly was crisis-ridden, such that members of the House were divided into two groups. Four members worked with the Governor, while 27 members opposed the Governor. The latter group supported the Speaker. As a result, the Governor could not present any Appropriation Bill to the House, to enable him to access funds to run Rivers State's affairs. That serious constitutional impasse brought governance in the State to a standstill. Even the Supreme Court, in one of its judgments in a series of cases filed by the Executive and the Legislative arms of Rivers State against each other, held that there was no government in Rivers State. My intervention and that of other well-meaning Nigerians to resolve the conflict proved abortive as both sides stuck rigidly to their positions to the detriment of peace and development of the State.

It therefore became painfully inevitable that to arrest the drift towards anarchy in Rivers State, I was obligated to invoke the powers conferred on me by Section 305 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, to proclaim the state of emergency. The Offices of the Governor, Deputy Governor, and elected members of the State House of Assembly were suspended for six months in the first instance. The six months expire today, September 17th, 2025.

I thank the National Assembly, which, after critically evaluating the justification for the proclamation, took steps immediately, as required by the Constitution, to approve the declaration in the interest of peace and order in Rivers State. I also thank our traditional rulers and the good people of Rivers State for their support from the date of the declaration of the state of emergency until now.

I am not unaware that there were a few voices of dissent against the proclamation, which led to their instituting over 40 cases in the courts in Abuja, Port Harcourt, and Yenagoa, to invalidate the declaration. That is the way it should be in a democratic setting. Some cases are still pending in the courts as of today. But what needs to be said is that the power to declare a state of emergency is an inbuilt constitutional tool to address situations of actual or threatened breakdown of public order and public safety, which require extraordinary measures to return the State to peace, order and security. Considered objectively, we had reached that situation of total breakdown of public order and public safety in Rivers State, as shown in the judgment of the Supreme Court on the disputes between the Executive and the Legislative arm of Rivers State. It would have been a colossal failure on my part as President not to have made that proclamation.

As a stakeholder in democratic governance, I believe that the need for a harmonious existence and relationship between the executive and the legislature is key to a successful government, whether at the state or national level. The people who voted us into power expect to reap the fruits of democracy. However, that expectation will remain unrealizable in an atmosphere of violence, anarchy, and insecurity borne by misguided political activism and Machiavellian manipulations among the stakeholders.

I am happy today that, from the intelligence available to me, there is a groundswell of a new spirit of understanding, a robust readiness, and potent enthusiasm on the part of all the stakeholders in Rivers State for an immediate return to democratic governance. This is undoubtedly a welcome development for me and a remarkable achievement for us. I therefore do not see why the state of emergency should exist a day longer than the six months I had pronounced at the beginning of it.

It therefore gives me great pleasure to declare that the emergency in Rivers State of Nigeria shall end with effect from midnight today. The Governor, His Excellency Siminalayi Fubara, the deputy governor, Her Excellency Ngozi Nma Odu, and members of the Rivers State House of Assembly and the speaker, Martins Amaewhule, will resume work in their offices from 18 September 2025.

I take this opportunity to remind the Governors and the Houses of Assembly of all the States of our country to continue to appreciate that it is only in an atmosphere of peace, order, and good government that we can deliver the dividends of democracy to our people. I implore all of you to let this realisation drive your actions at all times.

I thank you all.

Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Address


Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Bits of Naija posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Bits of Naija:

  • Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company?

Share