Some Nigerians
working with an American oil and gas service firm, Weatherford International,
have raised the alarm over gross abuse of local laws and sharp practices
being perpetrated by the Nigerian subsidiary of the company, Weatherford
Nigeria, against them. A source at the company, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said the firm has carried on with many anti-Nigerian policies such
as mass sack on flimsy excuses and appointment of a foreigner as Country
Manager in clear violation of Nigerian Local Content Act, which is one of the
significant developments aimed at localising management and control of oil
and gas industry. The source said apart from the fact that there were many
qualified Nigerians capable of running the firm as Country Manager, the foreigner
who was appointed, Manuel Hernandez from Venezuela, came into Nigeria via
Business Visa and has been working as an expatriate without the necessary
work permit. Going down history of the firm, the source said a Nigerian, Femi
Thomas was appointed as Country Manager of the company and was there for
about two years before he was redeployed as Vice President for Africa, while
another Nigerian, Femi Akarikiri, was appointed to succeed him, only for the
said Akarikiri to be demoted after just a year in office and replaced with
Hernandez. According to the source, “The first issue is that this is not an
industry where you can claim there are no qualified Nigerians for the job
because oil and gas industry in Nigeria is fully sophisticated. Number two is
that for the fact that you have had Nigerians in that position, the position
has been nationalised and so you cannot go back and revert to say that you
now need to bring an expatriate. “The third issue is that you lay off a lot
of Nigerians because you claim the industry is bad and you have no money to
pay but yet the question is how can you afford to pay expatriates if you have
laid off Nigerians who earn a fraction of what the expatriates earn? “By the
time you look at that picture, what you see is a company that does not have
any commitment to Nigeria or any respect to the ideals of the country. They
want to get paid, they want to drill for oil, they want to make money, but
where is the growth for Nigerians in that process? The average Nigerian
employee in the company earn less than $1,000 a month, but the average
expatriate earns $20, 000 a month or more. How can you afford one expatriate
if you lay off Nigerians on the basis that you can’t afford to pay them,” the
source queried. Already, the source said the Nigerian Content Development and
Monitoring Board (NCDMB) had been notified of the development, but that there
was great need to raise the alarm over the mass sack of over 100 Nigerians
and other deliberate plot of the company against Nigerians for prompt action
by the Nigerian government and other key stakeholders. Another credible
source, who equally does not want to be named, said as part of the plot to
sideline Nigerians from the management of the company, the said Akarikiri was
demoted from Country Manager to sales role in a market where there is nothing
to sell, adding that the development was purely orchestrated to eventually
fire him. He added that in another scheme to disguise the actual intention of
sidelining Nigerians in the affairs of the company, a Nigerian who was on
international assignment in Ivory Coast was brought in on the promise of
being attached to the said Hernandez, but he was surprisingly moved to Port
Harcourt and put in a lesser role from what he was doing in Ivory Coast. Source:
Thisday
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Monday, November 28, 2016
American Oil Firm Accused of Violating Local Content Act
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