Due to the two months' worth of unpaid wages, Metro Mass Transit Limited employees have decided to go on a sit-down strike.
The workers claim that the company's management's five years of inept management are to blame for the widespread strike action.
They demand that the management group be fired right away.
Anthony Appiah, the union's senior staff division's secretary, told Citi News that "anything of ours is not working." If you have been given a position as an executive for five years and, for the first time in this company's history, there are three managing directors, and we are not seeing any activity from them in terms of development, worker welfare, and service to the country, we must take action.
Senior and young employees at the firm depot in Kumasi, in the Ashanti Region, joined the statewide sit-down strike against poor working conditions.
They claim that in addition to not receiving pay for months, a number of other important issues that have been highlighted throughout the years have gone unresolved.
Edward Oppong Marfo, the Middle Belt Bureau Chief for Citi News, visited the Metro Mass station in Kumasi and discovered that the drivers had really refused to work because all of the cars were parked.
The management team at the terminal has likewise put down its tools, claiming that because their complaints have not been addressed, life has become intolerably difficult for them.
"For almost three months now, nearly 90% of the employees haven't received payment, and they haven't provided us with any concrete explanations. On the condition of anonymity, a management official said, "It's pathetic.