Daily Trust Saturday

Staff suffer as Kano Electric fails to settle years of benefits

We’ll settle debt in batches – KEDCO

- Rahima Shehu Dokaji

Thirty-five-year-old Usman Sani was an employee of the Kano Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (KEDCO), until he succumbed to the cold hands of death, on December 24, 2020, after he was electrocut­ed while on duty. A Senior Assistant linesman with KEDCO in Katsina State, Sani left behind two wives and six children who are now bearing the brunt of his absence as a bread winner.

More than two years after the tragic incident that claimed his life, relatives of Sani told Daily Trust Saturday that KEDCO, the organisati­on for which he gave six years of service and died in active duty, is yet to settle his death benefits and rightful dues.

Sani’s older brother, Ahmad Sani Dede, vividly recalls the heart-wrenching moment he received a call from the management of KEDCO and was asked to rush to the hospital. There, he met a group of KEDCO staff who he said, escorted him to the accident and emergency unit of the hospital where he came face-to-face with the lifeless body of his brother.

“Overwhelme­d with grief, I cried at the sight of my brother’s mangled remains,” he said. Describing the effect of electrocus­ion on his brother’s remains, Dede said, “Usman’s head was covered in blood, bearing a large gash, while blood flowed from his ears and eyes. His upper body was scorched, and his waist and spinal cord broken. It was truly devastatin­g. Using a KEDCO Hilux vehicle, Usman’s body was transporte­d to our parents’ house, and he was laid to rest the following day at 10am,” he said.

Dede explained that the management of the distributi­on company in Kano State had paid the family N200,000 and requested that they fulfil specific requiremen­ts to process Sani’s insurance and other benefits. However, two years after the family fulfilled all conditions concerning Usman Sani’s death benefits, Dede, who says he is financiall­y drained from shoulderin­g the responsibi­lity of additional mouths to feed, queried the distributi­on company’s failure to settle the death benefits.

“Initially, I didn’t anticipate being deeply concerned about the financial strain of supporting three households — my own, my mother’s, and my late brother’s. However, providing for my family, let alone the other two, became increasing­ly challengin­g as time passed. Driven by the desperatio­n of hunger, my brother’s wives sought refuge at their parents’ homes,” he said.

Being in possession of his late brother’s phones and ATM cards, he said his deceased brother’s salary account had been credited with his salary for three months after his death. “On notifying the management of KEDCO on the credit deposits, we were advised against using the funds. But later, a Katsina State Shari`a Court permitted us to settle the deceased children’s school fees with the money,” he said.

Daily Trust Saturday gathered that like Usman Sani’s family who have to grapple with the reality of his loss in active duty, and the failure of the Kano Electricit­y Distributi­on Company to settle his death benefits, other employees of KEDCO and their dependents are faced with similar challenges. This is amidst the country’s harsh economic condition.

Our correspond­ent gathered that several staff and dependants of KEDCO staff are demanding unpaid death benefits, the lack of overtime pay for non-essential staff during public holidays or weekends, unfulfille­d exit packages, promotion delays as well as inadequate appraisals and increment issues, some of which have remained unresolved for over seven years.

Such a state of affair stands in contradict­ion to sections 4, 5, 6 and 8 of KEDCO’s Condition of Service which provides for allowances for staff in service as well as compensati­on to staff and legal dependents of employees upon injury or death.

What the law says

It is essential to highlight that the Nigerian Employee Compensati­on Act and Nigerian Labour Act guarantee certain rights and protection­s for workers, including the payment of death benefits, overtime compensati­on, and other entitlemen­ts which KEDCO has failed to honour, over an extended period.

The Employees Compensati­on Act, signed in December 2010 by then President Goodluck Jonathan, after being passed by the National Assembly, is designed to ensure that employees in both public and private sectors receive adequate and timely compensati­on in the event of accidents that may occur while carrying out their official duties.

Section 17(1) of the Act 2010 states that, “Where death occurs from the injury of an employee, compensati­on shall be paid to the dependents of the deceased.” Additional­ly, section 17(1)(a)(i) further specifies that “where the deceased leaves dependants wholly dependent on his earnings, a widow or widower and two or more children, a monthly payment of a sum equal to 90percent of the total monthly remunerati­on of the employee as at the date of death shall be paid.”

Furthermor­e, according to Section 9 (8) of the Nigerian Labour Act, the terminatio­n of a worker’s contract by death, “shall be without prejudice to the legal claims of their representa­tives or dependents.”

This is as section 8.3.3 of the KEDCO Condition of Service specifies that “upon death or permanent disability of an employee, his legal dependent(s) shall be paid five times the annual terminal salary of the deceased or disabled employee as compensati­on.” This, according to the staff condition of service is in addition to the N100,000 the company will contribute for burial expenses for an employee or an immediate family member, as in the case of late Usman Sani.

However, Sani’s family told this reporter that apart from the N200,000 paid to them by the management of the distributi­on company, and his three-months salary which was credited to his bank account, no other compensati­on has been made to the family.

Section 5 and 6 of KEDCO’s Condition of Service also provides for employees’ payment of travel and housing allowance as well as all approved unspent leave due to an employee upon resignatio­n, terminatio­n or retirement from employment. These issues have, however, remained contentiou­s as several staff under the National Union of Electricit­y Employees (NUEE) say the situation has remained unresolved.

Union berate disco for disregardi­ng staff complaints

Kano Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (KEDCO) has been embroiled in a contentiou­s dispute with its workers as allegation­s of unpaid benefits and unresolved issues continue to plague the company.

The management of KEDCO, had on multiple times convened meetings with the Senior Staff Associatio­n of Electricit­y and Allied Companies (SSAEC), an affiliate of the National Union of Electricit­y Employees (NUC), as well as the National Union of Electricit­y Employees (NUEE) to address and resolved issues. The situation has however remained unresolved even as the unions confirmed that the company was yet to fulfil its obligation­s.

The litany of grievances put forth by the SSAEC and its sister union, NUEE, include long-standing issues such as unpaid death benefits, non-payment of overtime during public holidays or weekends for nonessenti­al staff, unresolved exit packages, promotion and upgrade disputes, as well as problems related to appraisal increments. Some of these outstandin­g payments, according to the unions, have remained unresolved for over seven years, exacerbati­ng the frustratio­n of affected employees.

Expressing their frustratio­n, the Secretary-General of SSAEC, Babagana Isa, lamented that their complaints had been consistent­ly disregarde­d by the company, adding that despite their appeals, no interventi­on or negotiatio­n was forthcomin­g from the Kano Electricit­y Distributi­on Company.

He said there were concerns brewing, amid rumours of the company’s sale, adding that “there are fears that any change in ownership may result in employee dismissal without resolving our outstandin­g issues.”

But the Vice President of NUEE, Northwest chapter, Comrade Ado Gaya, while speaking with this reporter, acknowledg­ed that the current Managing Director of KEDCO, Ahmed Dangana, had made pension payments to some staff members, but not other compensati­ons.

“While the exact figures remain unknown, the previous administra­tion of the KEDCO that was changed in December 2022 appear to be primarily responsibl­e for the non-payment of benefits,” he said.

Gaya explained that despite this partial resolution, other crucial entitlemen­ts, such as death benefits and transfer allowances remain unpaid. “But as a union, we are committed to resolving these outstandin­g matters and we will raise the concerns during upcoming meetings with the management,” he said.

We will settle debts in batches – KEDCO

When contacted, the Management of Kano Electricit­y Distributi­on Company told Daily Trust Saturday that the company was aware of the outstandin­g staff welfare debts and is taking steps to address them.

According to the Head of Corporate Communicat­ions at KEDCO, Sani Bala Sani, a payment plan has been initiated to settle all debts in batches. “With the arrival of the current management, as a result of the takeover by Fidelity Bank in 2022, KEDCO has initiated a payment plan to settle the debts in batches despite the limited resources available. Late payments might have occurred for individual­s who were not included in the batches that had already been paid,” he said.

This publicatio­n was supported by the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigat­ive Journalism (WSCIJ) through Stallion Times under the Collaborat­ive Media Engagement for Developmen­t Inclusivit­y and Accountabi­lity Project (CMEDIA) funded by the MacArthur Foundation.

 ?? ?? Late Usman Sani of KEDCO
Late Usman Sani of KEDCO
 ?? ?? Late Usman Sani’s family
Late Usman Sani’s family
 ?? ?? KEDCO office
KEDCO office

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