DSS Invites Dangote, NUPENG Reps Over Alleged Breach of Pact

The New Diplomat
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By Abiola Olawale

The Department of State Services (DSS) has again invited representatives from the Dangote Group and the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) to a meeting over allegations of breaching a recently brokered peace agreement.

It was gathered that the meeting has been scheduled to be held on Friday and will also be attended by representatives of the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, and other key stakeholders.

The move comes just days after NUPENG accused Dangote’s management of violating terms that allowed workers to unionize, threatening to resume a nationwide strike that could disrupt fuel supply across the country.

Recall also that the recent invitation came after a high-level meeting on September 9, 2025, at the DSS headquarters in Abuja, where federal government officials, including Ministers of Finance, Wale Edun, Labour and Employment, Mohammed Maigari
Dingyadi, and Minister of State for Labour, Nkeiruka Onyejeocha, reportedly brokered a truce amongst the parties.

That reported agreement, formalized in a three-page Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was said to have been signed by representatives of NUPENG, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Trade Union Congress (TUC), Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), and Dangote Group.

However, NUPENG’s leadership, in a joint statement signed by President Williams Akporeha and General Secretary Afolabi Olawale on September 11, 2025, alleged that Alhaji Sayyu Aliu Dantata, Managing Director of Dangote Group and a cousin to billionaire Aliko Dangote, issued directives undermining the pact.

According to the union, on September 10, Dantata instructed long-standing NUPENG Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD) branch members—many of whom are truck drivers—to remove union stickers from their vehicles.

The statement reads in part: “The press statement by Dangote Petroleum Refinery dated 11th September 2025 further confirms the company’s aim to crush our union, NUPENG, as well as stifle competition, with the ultimate goal of increasing fuel prices in the long run.

“The attempt to create an illusion of division within our union is not only malicious but entirely fabricated. If a ‘faction of tanker drivers’ truly existed, Dangote should have persuaded them to call off the nationwide strike of Petroleum Tanker Drivers directed by NUPENG, which was effective, peaceful, and 100 percent successful.

“The refinery also falsely claims it does not prevent its truck drivers from joining NUPENG.

“The MoU signed on September 9, 2025, stemmed from the company’s earlier resistance to unionisation — a fact the agreement itself confirms. Yet, on September 11, Dangote Refinery ordered the removal of NUPENG stickers from all trucks, replacing them with those of the Direct Trucking Company Drivers Association (DTCDA), a body allegedly created by the management. Our members have firmly resisted this directive.

“Individuals who have repeatedly lost elections in the Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD) Branch since 2023 have now become spokespersons for the DTCDA. Some of them have been granted interviews with local and international media in support of the company. Nigerians should also be aware that some of these individuals are facing criminal charges (Charge No. CR/042/23) at the FCT High Court for violent crimes, including an attempt to assassinate elected leaders of the PTD Branch and NUPENG. During one of their attacks, NUPENG’s General Secretary was beaten into a coma and only revived in the hospital.

“Nigerians must not be deceived by the company’s offer of free nationwide fuel delivery. This move is aimed at discouraging other employers from hiring tanker drivers so that only Dangote-employed drivers — compelled to join the DTCDA — will remain in the workforce. The strategy is clearly to crush NUPENG and its PTD Branch.

“It is also important to note that, apart from tanker drivers, the refinery’s operational and administrative staff have been obstructed from exercising their right to unionise. It is on record that Dangote Group does not permit unionisation in its cement and sugar plants across Nigeria. Nigerians should not support an arrangement that denies drivers and other workers in the Dangote Group their right to freedom of association.”

As of press time, Dangote Group had yet to respond to the latest allegations. Its earlier statement maintained that association with any trade union at its refinery remains strictly voluntary, in line with Nigerian law and International Labour Organisation (ILO) conventions.

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