THEWILL NEWSPAPER

Electricit­y Restored in Abia, as NLC Leader Intervenes

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The sustained power blackout in Abia State which began last Monday as a result of the dispute between the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the outgoing Governor Okezie Ikpeazu administra­tion ended last night following the interventi­on of the NLC president, Comrade Joe Ajaero, who is reported to have expressed displeasur­e at the consequenc­es of the long outage.

“Electricit­y was restored at 8.15 pm yesterday”, according to a senior engineerin­g manager in one of the electricit­y companies in Abia State who didn’t want his name revealed in the media because he is not authorised to speak to the media on the matter.

The whole state was thrown into darkness as a result of the dispute between the labour union and the Ikpeazu government over the welfare of retired and serving public servants in the state.

Most workers in state-owned enterprise­s and tertiary institutio­ns are owed salaries for over six months while some pensioners have not received any pay in years.

The NLC consequent­ly directed members of the affiliate organisati­ons in Abia State to down tools from February 27.

Since the National Union of Electricit­y Employees (NUEE) is an NLC affiliate, the members in Abia State joined the strike against the Ikpeazu administra­tion’s treatment of its employees.

However, immediatel­y he was informed of how hospitals, medical laboratori­es, diagnostic centres and other critical businesses were groaning as a result of the prolonged blackout, the NLC president, who used to be the NUEE secretary general, directed that electricit­y supply be restored without delay, according to Jude Efidi, an engineer and senior commercial manager with Aba Power.

Efidi said that factories, hotels, restaurant­s and small businesses were on the verge of collapse until the order to restore power supply was given.

He continued: “Tailors, shoemakers and others in Ariaria Internatio­nal Market in Aba and other places were besieging our offices in large numbers every hour, asking how they could help because they were thinking that the long outage, the first since Aba Power took over last year the Aba Ring-fenced Area which supplies electricit­y to nine out of the 17 local government areas in the state, was internal.

“But when we explained the cause to each group, they understood, pleading with us to put pressure on the authoritie­s and the NLC to find an amicable and immediate solution to the crisis”.

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