Michael Athokhamien Omnibus Imoudu, generally known as Pa Imoudu, was a labour union leader and activist. He encouraged workers in both the private and public sectors to form unions. During the colonial era, he used strike actions to seek better working conditions for Nigerian workers, as well as make the British change obnoxious laws that affected workers.

He later joined the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) and was one of the party’s delegates to London in protest of the 1946 Richards Constitution.

Born September 7, 1902, in Ukpafikan Quarters, Oke Ora near Sabongida Ora in Edo State, Imoudu attended Government School, Ora. At the death of his father, he accompanied his uncle to Sapele, later to Onitsha and finally to Agbor, where he completed his primary school education.

After his primary education, Imoudu moved to Lagos and worked with the Posts and Telegraphs Department as a linesman before moving to the Nigeria Railways.

While with the Railways, Imoudu became actively involved in the Railway Workers Union (RWU) and in 1939; he became president of the union. In the same year, the union was registered under the Trade Union Ordinance, which allowed it to seek collective bargaining with their employers. With Imoudu as head, the union renewed its demand for higher wages, de-casualization and improved working conditions.

Imoudu had constant clashes with European managers because of the preferential treatment given to European officials. Between 1941 and 1943, Imoudu was queried many times and dismissed in January 1943.

With the formation of the African Civil Servants Technical Workers Union in 1941 and Imoudu being the Vice President, he used the organisation to agitate for war bonus — Cost Of Living Allowance (COLA) — to cushion the effects of inflation caused by World War II (WW II). The government listened and made some COLA concession in 1942 under the leadership of Bernard Bourdillon.

In 1943, Imoudu was dismissed and detained, but his detention was later changed to restriction of movement. He was released on May 20, 1945, after the end of WW II.

Imoudu was released from prison by the government in 1945, presumably as a means to de-escalate labor tensions. A large rally was held to welcome him back to Lagos, however, and, on the 21st and 22nd of June 1945, Imoudu led a radical wing of the RWU to organize a general strike that became a historically important in Nigeria.

In 1946, Imoudu identified with NCNC and was nominated to its executive council.

From 1947 to 1958, he led different trade unions, including the All Nigeria Trade Union Federation, which enjoyed initial success, incorporating 45 out of the 57 registered unions at the time.

Pa Imoudu did all this with no intention of enriching himself, but to improve the nation and create a better working environment for workers. He could not even build a house or buy a car for himself, despite his dealings with the government and captains of industry. He was focused on making Nigeria a better country than milking the people.

During the Second Republic, he joined the People’s Redemption Party (PRP) as its deputy National President.

In pursuit of his welfare ideologies, he awarded scholarships to youths from different backgrounds to study in the USSR, China, and East Germany.

In 1982, however, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo built a house and bought a car for him as gifts for his 80th birthday, while a labour institute, Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS), was established and named after him in 1986. He died on June 22, 2005.

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  • Yeat [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    tw: mentions of sa

    i’m sorry if there’s any of you guys on here, but good lord i despise anti-natalists. just had a talk with one and they said r*pe is similar to giving birth (because babies can’t consent to being born…) and my blood is boiling

    • Comp4
      ·
      edit-2
      11 days ago

      deleted by creator

      • Yeat [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        oh i couldn’t agree more

        i’m sure you’ll get a big kick out of this, but i suggested to this same anti-natalist that we should work to end the material conditions that cause suffering (capitalism) rather than end humanity and they went on a big capitalist realist tangent about how communism wouldn’t work, society wouldn’t work without capitalism, how will goods be exchanged without money, anyone can be a billionaire, there are suffering that aren’t caused by capitalism like disease, rape, defects (things that capitalism contributes to lmao). it’s like a joke writing itself

      • blight [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        i probably have some brainworms, but i think there is an insidious way in which capitalism sort of holds us hostage by way of our children. someone responsible for the well-being of a child while still living under capitalism does in fact have something more to lose than their chains. not only do you have to #hustlegrind to provide for them which takes time and effort leaving you drained of energy that could be used for organizing, but also your family become hostages in the literal sense to threats from fascists.

        • Abracadaniel [he/him]
          ·
          1 year ago

          This is a compelling hypothesis but a user here has claimed that having a kid made them a better communist because they have a more real stake in the future. So unless you're using your time now for PRAXIS it may just be wishful thinking (which I'd be guilty of).

      • DayOfDoom [any, any]
        ·
        1 year ago

        As if the existence of pain devalues the beauty of life.

        Bugman statement.

    • newerAccountWhoDis [they/them]
      ·
      1 year ago

      While this comparison is entirely inappropriate, they where right about babies not being able to consent. And while it sounds like they had pretty serious brainworms, it's not looking like capitalism, war, patriarchy, or the climate catastrophe are about to go away in a few years. Instead, the situation is getting worse.

      I certainly wouldn't want to be born into a world of suffering that is our present. And I salute everyone who refrains form having a child for this exact reason.

      • Yeat [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        i mean yeah technically babies can’t consent but this doesn’t make the parents the moral equivalent to murderers. i don’t have any problem with people who aren’t having children at all and it’s pretty understandable not to given the situation we’re in. but this person doesn’t want to end capitalism 😭