No less than 100 street sweepers demonstrated in Calabar, the Cross River state capital, against the Governor Ben Ayade-led administration’s failure to pay them their four-month salary on Tuesday.
The old women, aged 45 to 60, who were engaged by the government to sweep the streets of Calabar Municipality and Calabar South, protested by filling the road leading to the Governor’s Office with rubbish and blocking the access to the governor’s office.
Our reporter in Calabar, who witnessed the protest, said it took the intervention of security operatives to calm the angry women down.
Speaking to journalists on the matter, their leader, 60-year-old Nkoyo Etim Effiong, said they had not paid street sweepers in the state for four months now.
“We are here to let the governor know that we have not been paid for four months. In 2015, they refused to pay us for six months and now they want to go away with our four months salaries,” she stated.
Asked how much their monthly stipend were, Madam Effiong said some of them were being paid N5,000 monthly while others were paid N10,000 monthly.
Those of us who are sweepers are paid differently. There are those who collect N5, 000, N8,000 and N10,000 monthly. There are those we call Wreckers and they collect N15,000 a month. We just want them to give us our money before they leave office,” she said.
Another elderly woman who gave her name as Emana Cobham claimed that they take so much risk in the course of sweeping the streets, adding “by 4.30am, you must go to your duty post, sweep your portion which is always a long stretch before day breaks.”
She recalled that many sweepers had lost their lives to accidents, and that “some have been raped while others have been robbed of their valuables, including phones.”
Efforts to contact Christian Ita, Chief Press Secretary to the governor, for his reaction was not successful as his telephone lines couldn’t connect.