Workers of the Michael Imoudu National Institute of Labour Studies (MINILS), on Friday in Ilorin, staged a peaceful protest over alleged five-year maladministration by management of the institute.
The placard-carrying workers, who are members of the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Unions (NASU) said there was the need to appoint a new management to improve the welfare of workers.
Oluwasina Owoeye, NASU State Secretary, who addressed journalists during the protests called on the Federal Government and the Ministry of Labour to appoint a new director-general from the academic staff.
According to Owoeye, a director-general from the academic staff would effect a positive turn around in the institute.
The chairperson of the branch union, Roseline Adebayo, described the five-year administration of outgoing Director-General, Alhaji Saliu Alabi, as ”ineffective and insensitive” to development of the institute and welfare of the workers.
“Disaster is all what the director-general has brought to the institute. He refuses to listen to words of wisdom. Our hostel accommodation has gone bad, no working tools and stationeries. Files are not attended to.
Our institute has become a ghost city and ineffective. The management has failed to promote ideals of the institute. We don’t want persons of Alabi here again”, she said.
However, when the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent contacted Alabi on telephone for reaction, he said he was on his way to Abuja.
Meanwhile, the workers later swept the premises of the institute as a symbolic farewell to send away the director-general.
The workers also held an interfaith prayer session against a return of what they described as ‘unproductive administration’.