City sweepers in Calabar town, Cross River State capital, numbering about 100 on Tuesday, littered the front of the Governor’s Office, Calabar with garbage in protest over their four months unpaid salary by the state government.
The women, who protested in front of the Governor’s Office told Vanguard that the last time they were paid their monthly stipends was last December.
The protest attracted passers-by and also obstructed vehicular movement around the seat of power located on Leopard Road, Calabar.
According to some of the sweepers, who spoke with Vanguard, they have made efforts to speak with their employer but their pleas seem to have fallen on deaf ears.
The city sweepers poured debris from waste bins and other garbage from the First Gate, which is the main entrance used only by the governor to the Second Gate used by others.
Security personnel, including policemen, and state security service, were seen trying to stop passers-by and journalists from taking pictures and making videos as they were “apprehending” onlookers and deleting the pictures from their devices.
One of the affected sweepers, Mrs Iquo Asuquo said they have not been paid since December 2022, and this month of April will make it four months.
She said: “The salary they pay me is just N10,000. Some of my colleagues collect even less, yet they have been unable to pay us.
“We decided to express our displeasure today (yesterday) by littering the front of the Governor’s Office with refuse because all the appeals to our employer seem to be irrelevant and this government is leaving in less than 35 days.
“They should just pay us, some of us are widows and have kids to take care of. We use the monthly stipends to buy vegetables, and resell, while some sell ‘table market’ at Marian and Watt markets. We are barely surviving”.
Another affected sweeper, Mrs Deborah Essien said: “We are suffering, many are dying. You can imagine living on N8,500 as a widow with five children”.