Tuesday, July 15, 2025 - Immediate past President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), Ayuba Wabba, has described the death of former President Muhammadu Buhari as a monumental loss to Nigerian workers and the masses, saying he would be remembered as a genuinely pro-poor and pro-people leader.
Reacting to the news of Buhari’s passing in a statement,
Wabba said the former President’s death came as a shock to many Nigerians,
especially workers who directly benefited from his empathy and economic
policies aimed at uplifting the downtrodden
“What was meant to be a routine health check in London sadly
turned into the demise of a Commander-in-Chief who will long be remembered for
standing firmly with the poor and vulnerable,” Wabba stated.
He recalled how, shortly after assuming office in 2015,
Buhari approved a $2.1 billion bailout package for cash-strapped states to help
clear the backlog of unpaid salaries and pension arrears. “He was deeply moved
by the hardship faced by workers. He once asked state governors how they
managed to sleep at night knowing that their workers were owed salaries,” Wabba
recounted.
In 2017, Buhari further demonstrated his solidarity with
workers by releasing another tranche of bailout funds running into billions of
naira to assist states in liquidating outstanding salary and pension
obligations. “Regrettably, some unscrupulous governors diverted the funds,”
Wabba lamented.
He also praised Buhari’s role in the national minimum wage
negotiations. “President Buhari was committed to improving workers’ welfare.
During talks on a new minimum wage, he even proposed a figure higher than the
N30,000 that was eventually agreed. Unfortunately, the resistance of many state
governors prevented a more generous outcome,” he said.
According to Wabba, Buhari’s most significant pro-poor
stance was his firm refusal to remove the petrol subsidy, despite immense
pressure from international financial institutions. “Despite intense pressure
from the IMF and the World Bank, President Buhari stood his ground and refused
to increase the price of refined petroleum products beyond the reach of
ordinary Nigerians. He chose to stand with the people,” he said.
Wabba noted that history would judge leaders not by their
rhetoric but by the impact they make on the lives of the people. “President
Buhari made a difference where it mattered most—among workers, pensioners, and
the poor,” he added.
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