Against Dangote, NUPENG Has No Case | TAIWO ADISA
Against Dangote, NUPENG Has No Case | TAIWO ADISA

While writing on this issue in her Funke Egbemode on Wednesday column in the Nigerian Tribune of September 10, my sister and prolific essayist, Funke Egbemode, chose to speak in parables. She talked of Dangote and his two wives and how the senior wife is refusing to perform her duties while placing a ban on the second wife from doing the same. A sort of turbo-engine trouble for the husbandman.

However, with the Department of State Services (DSS) intervening in the feud on Tuesday, sanity seemed to be on the horizon, as the differences between the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Dangote Petroleum Refinery attempted to foist fuel scarcity on the nation once again.
Following the truce brokered by the top echelons of the DSS, the strike already embarked upon by members of NUPENG was called off. That was on Wednesday. By Thursday, however, the drumbeats from NUPENG had started changing. The union had again reverted to the language of threats, leaving the possibility of the disruption of the fuel supply chain a reality. There is no debate that such is not a burden Nigerians would want to bear at this time. The DSS knew that, and that informed the decision of its directors to put in all the energy to avert the earlier push by the union.

Now that the chicken is coming home to roost, the time has come to open the veil with which my sister, Egbemode, deodorised the broil. We must now go beyond the parables and look at the union and Dangote in the eyes. Eyeball-to-eyeball, as they say.
So, when the union called NUPENG threatened to ground the nation’s fuel supply chain last week, choosing to harass Dangote Refineries for refusing to allow its workers to join the union, a lot of adult Nigerians who remembered the nine-week strike embarked upon by the union from July 4, 1994, quickly urged caution. The leadership of the DSS in Abuja also got the message and mobilised all the parties to achieve a truce.
But the NUPENG of 1994 is a different variety compared to the NUPENG of 2025. Times have changed, and things have also changed. Prof Wole Soyinka wrote The Man Died, and that is exactly what happened to the union. The man in NUPENG died over the years. It has transformed from the lion-hunting Kokori era to a cockroach-hunted weakling, whose mission in the oil industry is difficult to decipher. Right now, neither the centre court nor the middle of it is holding together in the realm of NUPENG. From the glorious era of fighting the devil, the union is seeking to degenerate into a band that terrorizes the helpless and the innocent.
If the above will not expressly capture the face of NUPENG as presently constituted, I don’t know how else you want to define that union in the face of the feud between it and Dangote Refinery over the issue of unionisation, through which the body is seeking to punish hapless Nigerians with fuel scarcity.
The Dangote Refinery had announced months ago that it was launching a special fuel supply arrangement that would eliminate discriminatory fuel prices at the pumps across the country. It was launching 4,000-strong CNG-powered trucks that would lead the direct supply of fuel to marketers across the country. It’s something that would tantalise the business-minded. You don’t need to invest in trucks and also battle with the shenanigans of the drivers, motor boys, and all that to run a filling station.
Nigerians have been waiting patiently for the refinery to start the much-advertised fuel supply, but along the line came the NUPENG distraction. NUPENG members would go on strike because Dangote Refinery was disallowing its staff to join their union! And like play, like play, a pyjama is turning itself into an aso ebi for grand occasions. Pronto, a strike had been announced, and before our very eyes, NUPENG was turning what should be an occasion for joy into utter sadness
I’ve read the contents of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) entered into by Dangote Group, NUPENG, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the Trade Union Congress (TUC), and the NMDPRA. The kernel of that agreement was that unionisation is free and that Dangote Group would not obstruct the desire of any staff to join the oil workers’ unions. On Thursday, the union raised the alarm that it might resume the suspended strike because the refinery was obstructing the implementation of the MoU.
According to the union, its grouse with Dangote Group began with the accusation that the refinery was attempting to bar drivers of its 4,000 compressed natural gas trucks from joining any union. It was also alleged that, contrary to the freedom of association guaranteed by the 1999 Constitution and international labour conventions, the refinery’s management and MRS, owned by Sayyu Dantata, had compelled drivers to sign undertakings not to join oil and gas unions. Though we also heard that the Dangote Group had gone ahead to form a local association for its workers, there are no complaints from the affected workers that their rights or freedom of association were being violated.
Contrary to the claims by NUPENG, the Dangote Petroleum Refinery on Thursday came up frontally against the union, accusing it of peddling “wholly inaccurate” submissions in the feud. The refinery stated its commitment to labour rights while asserting that membership in trade unions is a voluntary right.
It stated: “Assertions that drivers are compelled to waive union rights are categorically false. Allegations of union suppression are unfounded and appear to be part of a broader narrative aimed at discrediting private sector progress,” adding that: “Far from threatening livelihoods, this initiative is expected to create over 60,000 direct jobs and many more indirectly. We launched about 4,000 CNG trucks and created jobs. Dangote did not take anybody’s job.”
If NUPENG wants the ordinary Nigerians to take it seriously, it should batter the people less with the noise of its check-off dues and union stickers. It should play concrete roles in the lives of the people, the nation’s economy, and all that. Seeking to levy allegations that are rooted in emotional blackmail against a Dangote Refinery, which many have come to see as the liberator of the oppressed thus far, can only adorn that union a cloak of shame.


