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President, Organisation of Trade Unions in West Africa (OTUWA), Comrade Mademba Sock, has described as unacceptable the inability of governments in the sub region to adequately feed their population.
Speaking at the opening ceremony of OTUWA Working group on communication, Sock raised alarm over rising cases of poverty and hunger among workers and people of the west African sub region.

“We have focused attention on the theme of hunger and food security to underscore the fact that it is an important area in the lives of our members that we have, over the years, paid little attention to.
“A significant percentage of our members’ monthly budget is on food for the family. The inability of our respective governments in the sub region to adequately feed their population cannot obviously be a thing of joy for us as unions, he said.”

Speaking further, the union leader welcome the on-going efforts by unions to interrogate the root causes of the current state of food insecurity in the sub region.
In his remarks, President, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Ayuba Wabba, described as sad the fact that four decades after the formation of ECOWAS in 1975, it cannot feed the citizens of the economic community

Comrade Wabba, however, blamed poor policy choices as well as policy inconsistencies for the inability of the ECOWAS sub region to achieve food sufficiency and security for the huge population of the sub region.
According to him, “our agricultural production methods have stagnated and hardly benefited from inputs of modern science and technology development.

It is my hope that the meeting will address the causes of these retardation in our agricultural policies in the sub region and clearly outline the roles that we can, as trade unions play, to change the situation in the interest of millions of poor working families in our Sub region.”
He urged trade unions in the sub region to invest in the campaign to ensure that incidences of people going to bed habitually hungry as a result of insufficient food on their table, must become things of the past in the region.

Cotonou: Constitutive/First Meeting of the Economic Governance Working Group

Cotonou: Constitutive/First Meeting of the Economic Governance Working Group: The meeting took place in Cotonou, capital of Benin Republic, on 5th December 2016 with participants from Nigeria, Cote d’Ivoire, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Benin, the host. The meeting, while deliberating on its mandate of making OTUWA and important prop for harnessing and mobilising the energies of workers and their organisations in influencing policy dialogue at the sub-regional and other levels to realize governance mechanisms, processes and outcomes that have positive implications for the working people, identified a number of issues relevant to combating food insecurity and hunger in West Africa, in particular and Africa in general.

OTUWA decries rising poverty, hunger among workers

President, Organisation of Trade Unions in West Africa (OTUWA), Comrade Mademba Sock, has described as unacceptable the inability of governments in the sub region to adequately feed their population.
Speaking at the opening ceremony of OTUWA Working group on communication, Sock raised alarm over rising cases of poverty and hunger among workers and people of the west African sub region.

“We have focused attention on the theme of hunger and food security to underscore the fact that it is an important area in the lives of our members that we have, over the years, paid little attention to.
“A significant percentage of our members’ monthly budget is on food for the family. The inability of our respective governments in the sub region to adequately feed their population cannot obviously be a thing of joy for us as unions, he said.”

Speaking further, the union leader welcome the on-going efforts by unions to interrogate the root causes of the current state of food insecurity in the sub region.
In his remarks, President, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Ayuba Wabba, described as sad the fact that four decades after the formation of ECOWAS in 1975, it cannot feed the citizens of the economic community

Comrade Wabba, however, blamed poor policy choices as well as policy inconsistencies for the inability of the ECOWAS sub region to achieve food sufficiency and security for the huge population of the sub region.
According to him, “our agricultural production methods have stagnated and hardly benefited from inputs of modern science and technology development.

It is my hope that the meeting will address the causes of these retardation in our agricultural policies in the sub region and clearly outline the roles that we can, as trade unions play, to change the situation in the interest of millions of poor working families in our Sub region.”
He urged trade unions in the sub region to invest in the campaign to ensure that incidences of people going to bed habitually hungry as a result of insufficient food on their table, must become things of the past in the region.

NLC, OTUWA oppose Morocco’s membership of ECOWAS

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and Organisation of Trade Unions of West Africa (OTUWA) have condemned attempts by Morocco to join the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

Speaking at the opening of session of OTUWA’s rebuilding and consolidation workshop in Abuja, President of NLC, Ayuba Wabba, argued that there was nowhere in the ECOWAS treaty where non-West African state could become a member of the regional body.

His words: “There are reports that Morocco has applied to become a member of ECOWAS. For us in the NLC, we do not know where in the treaty establishing the organisation either in its original form in 1975, or the subsequent amendments that we can find a clause permitting a non-West African state to become a member of the organisation.

Abuja: Constitutive/First Meeting of the Working Group on Communication

Abuja: Constitutive/First Meeting of the Working Group on Communication: The meeting, which was held in Abuja on February 17, 2017, generally discussed strategies and mechanisms of utilising information/communication to popularise policies and mobilise workers for the implementation of policies across the sub-region. Among key strategies identified for implementation were; (i) the need to begin the publication of a newsletter, (ii) the designing and activation of an OTUWA website; and (iii) the need to immediately activate social media platforms such as whatsApp, Facebook, Twitter, etc.