Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike
FCTA Defends Salary Payments as NLC Plans Nationwide Protest
The Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) has defended its payment of workers’ salaries and wage arrears, following plans by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to stage a nationwide protest.
Lere Olayinka, Senior Special Assistant on Public Communications and Social Media to the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, confirmed that FCTA workers had begun receiving their payments, including part of the outstanding Wage Award arrears.
In a statement posted on his X handle on Sunday evening, Olayinka said, “FCTA workers received their January salary last week Friday, with one month payment of the five months arrears of the Wage Award.”
He explained that the administration had so far paid two months out of the five months owed, with plans to settle the balance in the coming months. “Two months out of the five months arrears of Wage Award paid already; remaining three months to be paid with February, March, and April salary,” Olayinka said.
The media aide questioned the decision of the NLC to mobilise workers in other sectors for the planned protest, noting that many of them were expected to be at their duty posts. “But NLC is mobilising workers in other sectors, who should be at their duty posts for a protest on Tuesday,” he said.
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Olayinka also highlighted that FCTA workers, on whose behalf the protest was being organised, had continued to work despite unresolved arrears. “Meanwhile, the FCTA workers on whose behalf NLC is organising a protest were at work last week Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. They will be at work tomorrow,” he added.
He criticised the labour union for what he described as selective action, arguing that similar wage issues remain unresolved in several states without intervention from the NLC. “More than 20 states have stopped paying the Wage Award or have not implemented it at all. NLC has not done anything. It is the FCT that is paying and has paid two months out of the five months of arrears—that is the problem of NLC,” Olayinka stated.
The wage dispute comes amid ongoing legal proceedings following an indefinite strike embarked upon by FCTA workers under the Federal Capital Territory Administration Workers’ Joint Union Action Committee (JUAC) on January 19, 2026, over unresolved welfare concerns.
Following a motion filed by the FCT Minister, the National Industrial Court ordered the workers to suspend the strike, adjourning the case to March 25, 2026, for further hearing.
In response, JUAC leaders Rifkatu Iortyer and Abdullahi Saleh approached the Court of Appeal, seeking leave to challenge the ruling and requesting a stay of execution pending determination of the appeal. The application, signed by senior lawyers including Femi Falana, SAN, argued that enforcing the lower court’s order could render the appeal nugatory.
Meanwhile, the NLC and the Trade Union Congress (TUC) have accused the FCT Minister of intimidating workers and reaffirmed their support for the striking staff. In a joint statement, the unions described the National Industrial Court ruling as “one-sided” and urged workers to remain resolute in their demands.
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