States Not Paying Existing N30,000 Minimum Wage Should Be Dragged to Court-Falana Tells Attorney General

Human rights lawyer, Femi Falana, has called on the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of justice to impose sanctions on states failing to pay the earlier agreed and mandated N30,000 minimum wage.

Falana made this known on Tuesday while speaking on Channel Television’s programme “The Morning Brief”.

Falana stated that the payment of the minimum wage was a legally binding agreement that state governments freely entered into, and state governments failing to honour the deal are in breach of the law.

In his words, “Once a new agreement, a new minimum wage becomes the law of the country. The Federal Government has a duty, and the Attorney General of the country has a duty to drag any state government that does not pay to court.

READ MORE: Prayers Won’t Solve Hardship, Nigerians Chose Bad Leaders—Primate Ayodele

“I mean, the Attorney General can just file a new case, which is a good development, by saying over the years, we have accused state governments of diverting monuments for local governments.”

He continued, “There is no state in Nigeria today that cannot pay more than the minimum wage because the government removed fuel subsidy last year and told Nigerians that the money made from that policy shall be [paid to state governments].

“I heard you earlier. Oh, some people cannot pay N30,000 minimum wage. It shouldn’t be coming from the government because that is an admission of illegality,” he said.

Follow Parallel Facts on WhatsApp Channel:https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaCQSAoHgZWiDjR3Kn2E