Abuja environmental workers have threatened to shutdown all public cemeteries in the Federal Capital Territory.
This is coming hours after electricity workers suspended their strike after a total shutdown of the power grid in the country.
The striking staff of Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) have begun an indefinite strike since Tuesday over the failure of the FCT Administration to implement a new salary structure for them.
The fresh threat is coming after the workers shut down the cemeteries on Wednesday, but agreed to reopen them on Thursday.
Chairman of Amalgamated Union of Public Corporation, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees (AUPCTRE) in AEPB, Comrade Muktar Bala, told journalists on Thursday that if no action was taken, the cemeteries would be shut down.
He said the union would also shut down all other operational systems of the environmental board.
Mr Bala said the FCT administration had not placed any priority on the welfare of members of the union, who were daily exposed to various health hazards, including handling of corpses.
According to him, the reopening of the cemeteries on Thursday was temporary to allow for negotiation, but will be shut down again if the discussions fail.
“As the chairman of one of the unions in AEPB, I can assure you that it is a collective decision by the whole unions, with backing from the national union.
“People think it is only waste management that we do, they don’t know that even unclaimed corpses in hospitals are taken care of by us.
“These dead bodies that have over stayed in the hospital for three to four years, we take care of them, without knowing what killed them.
“Hospitals come to us when they want mass burial for such dead bodies. If there are unclaimed or unknown corpses either on the road or elsewhere, police will write reports and bring them to us for burial.
“All these hazards, people don’t look at it. We want to tell the administration that apart from managing the solid waste, we engage in other things,” the chairman said.