The Department of State Services (DSS) has blamed the ongoing
nationwide strike embarked upon by members of the Petroleum and Natural
Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) on oil giant, TOTAL
Nig. Plc., saying that the company reneged on an agreement with the
union.
DSS spokesperson Marilyn Ogar, while addressing the media yesterday
on the strike, urged Nigerians associated with TOTAL’s management to
compel it to end the suffering they had imposed on Nigerians by keeping
the said agreement.
Ogar further disclosed that the matter was brought to the DSS office
by PENGASSAN officials in November, following which the Service summoned
TOTAL’s managing director Elizabeth Proust, saying the oil giant’s
recalcitrance triggered the industrial action.
“The issue is the ongoing strike by NUPENG and PENGASSAN which is
biting hard on all Nigerians. We want to state that in November, 2014,
PENGASSAN had written the Service to make a formal complaint about the
transfer of Elo Victor Ogbonda to Lagos from Port Harcourt by TOTAL
after she was elected as a zonal executive of the union,” said Ogar.
“Consequently, this Service summoned the managing director of TOTAL,
Elizabeth Proust, on November 5, 2014, to resolve the dispute. It was
agreed that Ogbonda would be re-instated, posted back to Port Harcourt
and granted leave of absence for the period she would serve as an
executive of PENGASSAN.”
Ogar said that PENGASSAN later informed the DSS that TOTAL had reneged on its promise to recall Ogbonda.
“Consequently, this Service contacted TOTAL and was informed that the
company will not go back on its sack order. All entreaties to the
company failed, thus culminating in the current strike and the attendant
fuel scarcity,” Ogar said.
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