Nigeria is stagnant — Nted


Comrade Anthony Nted is the immediate past President-General of the Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) and Chairman of the union’s Advisory Council. Nted in this interview speaks on leadership challenges and dockworkers reform, among other issues.


Tell us about your background and growing up?


I was born and brought up in Forcados, Warri in Delta State. My father was a fisherman. To the grace of God, he died as one of the richest fishermen around. But for me, my father was one of the poorest men because he did not send me to school. I was seeing other children in the secondary school and in the university, but here I am being a fisherman. I said to myself, I cannot continue like this.
One day, I saw some boats leaving from Forcados to Warri, I just jumped into one of them in search of education and better opportunities. I had no money, no brother and no friend. But when I landed at Warri waterside, I started menial jobs and later I met somebody at the waterside doing the same menial jobs. We became friends and I started living with him in one small room.
From there, I started saving money for my personal accommodation. After some time, I met a lady who told me that she had a place for rent, a very small room. I rented the place. There was no money to buy a curtain; I used waterproof to do the curtain. I lived there and was doing the menial job. But my mind was set on going to school.
I later registered with Bristol commercial centre. It became very difficult for me to cope. I could not do it full time because I had no money. I later got a job at K. Challarams. After saving some money I enrolled into another school in Warri, the Institute of Continuing Education. After sometimes, the K. Challarams that I was working with closed down. Thereafter, things became tougher for me.
As God would have it, I later got a job with Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) as a dockworker; loading and off-loading at the quay apron. It was from there I made some friends. One day, I came to work in the morning and I saw workers fighting in the ports. I asked what happened. They told me that they had overthrown the leadership of the dockworkers branch of the Maritime Workers Union. They accused the union leaders of not doing well, committing several frauds and not interested in workers’ welfare.
Later that night, some of my friends came to call me that some people came from Lagos. I joined them, we met in a hotel. I later followed them with one of my friends called Pouyibo. They told the people from Lagos that their former leaders were cheating them and that they wanted new leadership. After that night, they said they had chosen me to go to Lagos alongside Pouyibo. When we came to Lagos that was the first time I saw Tin Can and Apapa Ports. We addressed the dockworkers and went round.
When we got back to Warri, we set up a caretaker committee; I was chosen as the chairman of the committee. That was how I started my union career. When the time for elections came, they said they wanted me to contest as the Zonal Vice Chairman. I contested the election, and by the grace of God, I won the election. From Zonal Vice Chairman, I became the District Chairman of the zone. From the zone, I became the President of the dockworkers branch of the union.
From the branch President, I became the President-General. At the same time, I became the Vice President of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) during the first tenure of Abdulwaheed Omar.
I so much believe in education that was why when I was the President-General of the Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria; I did everything within my power to ensure that dockworkers were educated both locally and internationally. We took workers to Dubai, London, America, South Africa, and other places for training. Locally, we trained over 5,000 workers while internationally, we trained over 1,000 workers.
How does it feel sharing same birthday with Nigeria
If I say I am not happy, it will sound as if I am not grateful. I am happy that we are an independent nation, and I am happy that I was born on the day Nigeria got her independence. But besides that, the only reason why I am happy is that I am alive. For me, I believe that the country is not growing. If the way I am growing today, the country is also growing, Nigeria would have been a better place to live in but it has remained static.
For the country, what has been going on year after year does not inspire hope.

Leadership has remained the bane of the country’s development and growth. Is it not sad that for 60 years, Nigeria cannot find a solution to its leadership challenge?

What is there to celebrate in a country that cannot give 12 hours of electricity to its citizens? A country that is one of the leading oil producing countries in the world, yet imports petroleum products? A country that cannot provide motorable roads for its citizens? A country that cannot provide free and quality education to its citizens? A country that cannot feed its citizens, or a country that cannot protect its citizens?
Can people who have no job, no accommodation, no cheap and reliable transport system, no affordable and quality health services, or afford the basic necessities of life, celebrate? The answer is no. It is only when these things are available and affordable for the citizens and the citizens are safe, their properties are secured, that people can think of celebration.


You talked about leadership being the bane of the country’s development. What type of leadership do you wish to see in Nigeria?


We need leaders that have foresight, vision, energy and youthfulness among others. We need leaders that can on their own find out the true situations of things, what the masses are passing through and not what sycophants tell them. We need strong and able leaders.
President Muhammadu Buhari is a very good President. He is not corrupt, but we cannot say so about those working with him. In a situation where you have people referred to as cabals who shield the President from the truth, from what the citizens are passing through, there is a problem.
We need a President that is youthful and mobile that can decide on his own to wake up in the morning and decide to visit the ports, the factories, the road projects, slums or shanties where people are living, the schools and others to see the situation of things on his own. He can decide on his own to go and see the access roads to the ports, or go to Abakiliki, Aba, Ogoni, Southern Kaduna, Niger, Oshogbo, Isolo, industrial areas and other places to see what is happening not what sycophants tell him.
When the President is strong and agile, he will be able to do these things. In all, we also need a President like Buhari who will not steal, has the interest of the nation above family interest, believes in Nigeria, not sectional, tribal or a religious bigot.


What did you do during your tenure as MWUN President-General to enhance the welfare of dockworkers?


When I became the President-General of the union, dockworkers had no conditions of service. We were able to set up what is called the minimum standards. That is why we have the conditions of service for the dockworkers today. After my tenure, the man I handed over to, continued from where I stopped and improved on it.
Because of the foundation we had laid, Prince Adewale Adeyanju that took over from me has continued to build on the foundation of a peaceful industrial environment. We do not believe in unnecessary shutdown of the ports. Most of the work stoppages in the ports during my tenure were ordered by NLC over national issues. That is what Comrade Adeyanju is upholding today.
If there is no industrial action, it means the leadership is doing well. If the dockworkers are not happy, there will be restiveness in the ports. So, those foundations we laid are yielding fruits and sustaining industrial peace.
Source: Ships and Ports News

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