 of petrol subsidy removal on citizens. The demands include an increase in the minimum wage, tax holiday for certain categories of people, as well as reverting to status quo as negotiations continue. A federal government delegation held a meeting with representatives of organized labour, excluded in the Nigeria Labour Congress at the Preston Trevilla, a bourgeois in Sunday. Deli Alake spoke spokesperson for the government's delegation to the meeting, told State House correspondents after the meeting that most of the demands are not impracticable and they would be tabled before the president. So give us the elite where a lot of the items on the list are not impracticable. What we need to do is to study the numbers very well and then we have asked the TUC to also give us the elite to consult very exhaustively and come back on Tuesday, reconvene on Tuesday to actually look at the numbers, the viability, practicability of all the items that have been presented to us. Now, most important top priority on the list, which the government is also looking at very seriously and the president has announced before is the issue of the minimum wage which the labour movement has demanded as a consequence of these removal of the consequential impact of the removal of subsidy. So government is looking at that and Mr. President is most likely going to constitute a tripartite committee. Speaking to newsmen, TUC President Festus Osifo said while some progress has been made with the negotiations, the union would still brief its members ahead of Tuesday's meeting. We have presented the list of our demands to them and they received it in good faith that they will go back to their principal and come back to us on Tuesday. So we are hopeful that the demand that we have presented would be reviewed in the best interest of Nigerian workers and the entire Nigerian masses. It's because they are going back to Mr. President. So we also think that we should give them a benefit of that so that we will convey this meeting again on Tuesday. So we've and topmost in our demand was clearly stated at all that for utmost good faith and in the interest of social dialogue that they should revert back the pump rise while discussion continues.