The last minute reconciliatory meeting convened by the Ministry of Labour and Employment to resolve the crisis between the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and Dangote Group to avert an industrial action has ended in a deadlock.

The closed door meeting lasted about five hours on Monday, September 8, 2025.

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As of 11 p.m. on Monday, the Ministry of Labour and Employment parties to the deliberation could not arrive at any meaningful resolution.

The representative of Dangote Refinery, Sayyu Dantata, had walked out of the meeting which had in attendance, both ministers of labour, the leaders of NUPENG, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC), Petroleum Tankers Drivers (PTD) and a the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Authority (NMDPRA).

Recall that NUPENG had said it would start sourcing for alternative employment from September 8, over the refusal by Dangote Group to allow newly-employed Compressed Natural Gas (CNG)-powered tanker drivers at the Dangote Refinery “join labour unions.”

Although some of the unionists at some point staged a walk out, they later went in but still failed to reach any meaningful conclusion.

Some of the labour leaders were overheard complaining about the representative from Dangote Group who was alleged to be making matters worse for them as he was being recalcitrant to sign the MoU.

Some of the unionists however suggested that the meeting should be adjourned for a later date.

Major oil associations align with NUPENG in strike against Dangote

Addressing newsmen after the meeting abruptly came to an end, the President of NUPENG, Williams Akporeha, who accused Dangote of an intent to not only monopolise the system but to also monopolize the workers, insisted that the union would not allow any form of modern slavery.

He said: The action of Labour is also for the interest of Nigerians. We cannot stand and see an investor whose main purpose is to come and enslave Nigerians.

“It cannot take us back to the dark days of slavery. Nigerians have wished so well that we enslave them. So it’s unfortunate that at this point in time we’re having an investor whose main purpose is to say there can’t be union in his establishment.

“He wants to monopolise the entire system and even monopolize workers alongside with them. This we said no and it can’t happen during our time.”

The Acting General Secretary of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Benson Upah, explained that due to the action of the representative of Dangote Refinery, the parties involved were unable to reach any form of agreement.

Upah stated: “The representative of the Dangote refinery walked out on the Minister and organised labour.

“So there was no agreement? No, even when we bent backward to accommodate his uncompromising behaviour, he still did what he had to do. So we are left with no option but to do the needful.”

When asked what the needful might be, he said: “The action continues.

“It takes more than a party to reach a resolution. So whenever the representative of the Dangote petroleum refinery sees the need for a meaningful dialogue, we are ready.

“We are ready any time, even this night. If he changes his manner and comes back, that he is ready for discussion, we are here. That is the reason why we are here.”

The Star
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