Employees of Canal 3 Niger say they have gone for over one year without being paid their salaries. / Photo: Getty Images

Popular private television channel Canal 3 Niger has sacked 36 employees who went on a three-day strike to demand pay arrears.

Those sacked on Tuesday include journalists, cameramen and technicians.

Media associations say many journalists in the country have not been paid for a year or even more.

Media outlets are grappling with plummeting revenues after COVID-19 pandemic and regional sanctions on the landlocked nation following a coup last year.

'Insubordination, breach of contract'

Canal 3 Niger head Ismaël Abdoulaye told AFP on Thursday some of the dismissals were for "insubordination" and the others "breach of contract."

Chamssiyatou Kimba, a spokesperson for the sacked employees, told a press conference they had been demanding two months' back pay, adding that the salary arrears owed to them were for "over one-and-a-half years."

"Instead of the two months' salary we were demanding, they paid us for only one month and we went on strike," Kimba said.

Canal 3 Niger head Abdoulaye said the "day they received a month's salary in back pay... everyone disappeared without ensuring minimum service."

'Illegal' strike

"The strike was illegal, there are procedures to be followed to go on strike," he added.

But Kimba disputed this, saying the employees on strike had informed the management about their intention to take industrial action.

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AFP