Tag: Strike

  • Strike: FG begs doctors to return to work

    Strike: FG begs doctors to return to work

    The Minister of Health, Osagie Ehanire, yesterday urged the striking resident doctors to return to work.

    He made the call in Abuja during a virtual news briefing to mark this year’s World Health Day.

    “I call on our striking resident doctors to call off their strike and return to work as this is not a good time for such activities. House officers have started receiving their outstanding entitlements and we’re working assiduously to address other issues raised by the doctors,” he said.

    Ngide said the theme of this year’s World Health Day, ‘Building a Fairer, Healthier World for Everyone’ was a reminded that access to healthcare was no longer to be taken as a privilege but as a human right.

    He said despite the government’s best efforts, important lessons must be learned from the COVID-19 response.

    He said a first step towards this was optimum financing and release of health budgets in states and local governments, noting to ensure this, that the Federal Government had operationalized the Basic Health Care Provision Fund as provided for in the National Health Act 2014.

    Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, whose speech was read by Walter Kazadi-Mulombo, Country Representative, said at least half of the world’s population still lacked access to essential health services.

    Moeti said over 800 million people spent at least 10% of their household income on health care, and out of pocket expenses drive almost 100 million people into poverty each year.

    Meanwhile, the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors has said that it will continue its ongoing indefinite strike that started on April 1 as the government was yet to meet its demands.

    The association stated this in a communiqué issued after its virtual national executive council meeting last night. The meeting was held to review the strike action and the government’s offers.

    It blamed Ngige for feigning ignorance on the amount paid for hazard allowance on national television yesterday.

    “This is an all-time low coming from someone who has been in the Nigeria Senate where monthly hardship allowance for senators is N1,​242,122.70.

    “Demanding for five weeks for its review despite the ongoing strike is really shameful. A sincere government should immediately call all stakeholders together to address this issue ones and for all,” the association said.

  • JUST IN: Polytechnic lecturers begin indefinite strike

    JUST IN: Polytechnic lecturers begin indefinite strike

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics has commenced an indefinite strike with effect from today.

    The union said this followed the failure of the government to address the sorry state of polytechnics and monotechnics and the expiration of the ultimatum issued since March 2020.

    The action is coming less than a week after resident doctors embarked on a nationwide strike over non-payment of allowances and other issues.

    Announcing this at a press briefing in Abuja on Tuesday, the ASUP President, Anderson Ezeibe, said academic activities had been shut shown in all polytechnics and like institutions nationwide with effect from 12am, April 6.

    According to him, the union’s demands were communicated to the ministries of education, labour and others as well as to state governors but nothing was done about them.

    Ezeibe listed the lecturers’ grievances to include non-implementation of 2014 NEEDS Report and non-release of revitalization fund to the sector despite assurances since 2017.

    He said, “Our grievances also include the non-reconstitution of governing councils in federal polytechnics and many state-owned institutions leading to the disruption of governance and administrative processes in the institutions since May, 2020.

    “This has also undermined the renegotiation of the union’s 2010 agreement with the government which was unilaterally suspended by the government for over two years now.”

  • Join strike now or pay N5m fine, NARD threatens COVID-19 doctors

    Join strike now or pay N5m fine, NARD threatens COVID-19 doctors

    The National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has ordered doctors at the COVID-19 isolation centers to join the ongoing nationwide strike.

    NARD threatened that failure to do so will attract a fine of N5m.

    The body also warned that any branches ignoring the ongoing strike, which started on April 1, would not be able to hold any national position for the next two years.

    The threat to impose a N5m fine on errant branches was contained in an internal memo sent out to members by the National Executive Council of the association, the Punch newspaper reported.

    The internal memo read in part, “NARD affirms her commitment to the welfare of all members. All members of NARD will be levied the sum of N2, 500 as a strike levy for the smooth prosecution of the industrial action.

    “Penalty for any centre that sabotages the industrial action will be payment of a fine of N5m and suspension from holding any NARD national officers committee positions for two years.”

    NARD, an association of doctors undergoing residency training, had on April 1 begun a nationwide strike over the government’s failure to pay salaries of house officers and review the N5,000 hazard allowance of doctors.

    Last-minute efforts on March 31 by the Federal Government to prevent the strike failed as the doctors shunned an agreement they signed with the government on the grounds that the proposals contained in it were not new.

  • FG postpones meeting with striking doctors

    FG postpones meeting with striking doctors

    A meeting between the Federal Government and striking resident doctors scheduled for Tuesday (today) has been postponed.

    The government explained that this was to give room for the Federal Ministry of Health, Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria and other relevant agencies to complete the assignments given at last week’s meeting.

    Minister of Labour and Employment Chris Ngige yesterday said the meeting with the leadership of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) would be rescheduled.

    Ngige said: “The meeting is not holding tomorrow. We are waiting for the Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH) to give us the green light.

    “The assignments assigned to different agencies, MDCN, committee of Vice-Chancellors have been completed and the list of House Officers transmitted to the Accountant General’s Office.

    “The government side is expected to complete all their assignments Monday and Tuesday. They will tell me what they have done tomorrow (today) and the FMoH will then call for a meeting. The meeting will hold whenever the FMoH is ready.”

  • Strike: FG faults rejection of MoA by resident doctors

    Strike: FG faults rejection of MoA by resident doctors

    The Federal Government has faulted the National Association of Resident Doctors’ (NARD) rejection of the Memorandum of Action (MoA) signed on March 31 in spite of meeting the demands of the association.

    The Minister of Labour and Employment, Sen. Chris Ngige said this in a statement by Mr Charles Akpan, Deputy Director, Press and Public Relations of the ministry on Saturday in Abuja.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the resident doctors had threatened to commence strike on April 1, alleging that the Federal Government had reneged in the agreements entered with the doctors.

    The aggrieved doctors’ agitations include the non-payment of salaries of three to five months of some house officers and non-recruitment of house officers.

    Others are abolishment of the bench fees for doctors undergoing training in other hospitals, non-payment of National Minimum Wage and hazard allowances.

    Ngige said that government was faithful to the agreement entered with the aggrieved resident doctors by the President of NARD, Dr Uyilawa Okhuaihesu

    Ngige said that the Federal Government had substantially met the demands of NARD.

    He explained that some of the demands by NARD were made in error as some of the issues were already conciliated and implemented hundred per cent.

    He, however, said that the outstanding issues which came up at the last conciliation were time- lined along a month life span of implementation, adding that they were still work in progress.

    The minister, however, faulted the unilateral repudiation of the MoA by NARD’s President, describing it as unknown in labour negotiation.

    “He did not participate in most of the discussions last Wednesday because he fell ill not quite after the meeting started and had to excuse himself.

    ”He handed over to his deputy, the Secretary-General and other officers of the association, who fully participated. We spent seven hours and by the time we put our signatures to the papers, it was eight hours.

    “Disowning the MOA duly negotiated is unknown to labour. The two parties to the negotiation signed the MOA. Four officers from government and three from NARD signed the document.

    ”The president who was not at the meeting but fully represented by deputies went to NARD’s NEC and disowned the paper because they were signed by his deputy and secretary general.

    ”There is what is called transmission of power. He as the President fell sick and his deputies continued with the meeting. That’s allowed,” he said.

    Ngige said that it was wrong for NARD to impose a fait accompli on the Federal Government while negotiation was ongoing.

    According to him, when a trade dispute has been apprehended, no party imposes on the other, a fait accompli.

    ”We signed a memorandum that says NARD will go back to its members to educate them on what has been agreed, the timelines placed on them, with a view not to disturb the industrial milieu in the health sector.

    ”We also agreed to reconvene after four weeks, “the minister said.

    The minister added that the four weeks was given to allow enough time to implement the issues in the timeline, some of which would take three weeks, before reconvening.

    He further expressed disappointment that NARD made a detour and mobilised members into action on the Eastertide, when Christians were observing the holiest week in their universal calendar.

    He dismissed as untrue, allegation that doctors in the public health institutions across the country, were not insured.

    On this note, he said the Federal Government spent N13.3 billion in 2020, on Group Life Insurance not just for doctors and health workers but also for workers in the federal civil and public service.

    He stated that the reason for the composite exercise was to stop a situation where ministries and agencies of government worked in silos in payment of death benefits to workers and with lapses in some cases.

    “This N13.3b was paid to thirteen insurance companies and brokerage firms to administer.

    “And this is not the first time that NARD and teaching hospitals have been told to send in names and make claims for members who have lost their lives.

    “It is an insurance that runs for one year and it is still on till March that just ended and even at that, the new payment is now being processed, so that it becomes a continuous thing,” he said.

    The minister added that NARD was again reminded of the development while signing an MoA on March 31, 2012 to put up claims through the Ministry of Health to the Head of Service of the Federation.

    This, he said was the only basis for payment of premium to the beneficiaries.

    He further said that the procedure was for all health workers in the Federal Government employee, noting that Federal Government fast-tracked the insurance cover last year in anticipation of casualties attendant upon COVID-19 outbreak.

    He said that unionisation for the welfare of workers should not be only for the purpose of strike, rather, going the extra miles to exploit all opportunities provided by government for the welfare of the workforce.

    “So, NARD should make claims for the seventeen of their members it confirmed dead as result of COVID-19.

    “They have the right to make a claim on behalf of their members. The insurance company only needs to verify the claims and pay.

    “They can similarly make claim under the Employee Compensation Act for any of their members who has suffered injury in the course of his or her work or hazard in the course of work,’’ he said.

    Speaking on the Medical Residency Programme which is the major reason for fresh action by NARD, the Minister declared that the progrramme has been working hitch-free since it came up in 2019.

    He said that the House of Representatives had to do a supplementary appropriation to accommodate it in 2020 COVID-19 budget and the funds, fully released by the Federal Ministry of Finance.

    He therefore urged doctors to respect the Hippocratic Oath which makes the wellbeing of patient’s cardinal.

  • Judiciary workers threaten to shutdown courts days after doctors embark on strike

    Judiciary workers threaten to shutdown courts days after doctors embark on strike

    Like resident doctors, Nigerian judiciary workers have announced their plans commence a nationwide strike.

    The Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) declared that the indefinite action will commence after the Easter holiday.

    A circular issued on Saturday ordered the closure of courts across the country from Tuesday, April 6.

    The communication signed by JUSUN’s General Secretary, I. M. Adetola, copied all states and zonal heads of the union.

    JUSUN recalled that at its last national meeting on March 13, in Abuja, a 21-day deadline was issued to the government.

    The union is demanding the immediate implementation of financial autonomy for the judiciary.

    “As a result of the public holiday on April 5, 2021, the strike action has been postponed to Tuesday, April 6, 2021.

    “You are directed to shut down courts and departments in your states until further notice from the National Secretariat of JUSUN in Abuja,” the circular read.

  • How COVID-19 killed 17 UCH doctors

    How COVID-19 killed 17 UCH doctors

    The President of the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan Chapter of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), Dr Temitope Hussein has revealed how 17 doctors were killed by COVID-19 pandemic

    Hussein, who was justifying the association’s reasons for joining the nationwide strike of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors, NARD, explained that the families of the deceased doctors were yet to benefit from the Death-in-Service Insurance Scheme.

    According to him, the striking doctors were also protesting the non-payment of salaries of some of their members across the country and demanding for an upward review of hazard allowance, among others.

    He decried the agony its members nationwide had been made to pass through for three months now without salaries, despite their uninterrupted service delivery to the nation.

    Hussein said in spite of the three-month window given to the Federal Government to review the hazard allowance of health workers, the hazard allowance had remained at a paltry sum of five thousand naira monthly.

    He explained that the strike came on the heels of the expiration of the 60-day ultimatum given to the Federal Government on Jan. 25.

  • Shoprite workers embark on protests, shut down company indefinitely

    Shoprite workers embark on protests, shut down company indefinitely

    Shoprite workers at Ring Road branch, Ibadan, on Friday, embarked on another round of protest, shutting down the company indefinitely.

    The workers, under the aegis of National Union of Shop and Distributive Employees (NUSDE), vowed that the company would remain shut until management acceded to their demands.

    The Chairman, NUSDE, Shoprite branch, Mr Williams Peter, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Ibadan that the union was using the Easter period to press home its demands since dialogue had failed.

    He stated that all Shoprite stores had been shut down nationwide because the negotiation between the union and the management had been deadlocked.

    Peter attributed the indefinite strike to the alleged refusal of the management to meet up with the demands of the union.

    He said that although the planned transfer of Shoprite to a new owner had been withheld for now, we see this Easter period as the right time to get management to listen to us and accede to our demands.

    “However, if the management is not ready to listen to us, it then means that Shoprite is not ready to open this April. We will shut the company down until they listen to us.

    “Give us what we want and we will then be ready to discuss with the new investors and have a new agreement with them,” the union leader said.

    Meanwhile, the management of the company has described the industrial action embarked upon by the workers as ‘unlawful’.

    The management, in a memo issued by its Divisional Human Resources Manager, Adeola Kagho, the company said that it was appropriate action to be taken against the striking workers, saying that this might include their summary dismissal, should they fail to return to work.

    “Please note that your conduct is in breach of your contract of employment, company rules and procedures and the applicable federal legislation.

    “The company is not prepared to tolerate your participation in any unlawful industrial action.

    “The company is now considering appropriate action to be taken against you and this may include your summary dismissal, should you disregard the instruction/ultimatum hereunder.

    “You are accordingly instructed to return to work immediately in an orderly and diligent manner,” Kagho said.

    She urged the workers to follow the ‘established company’s internal procedure, should they wish to raise any grievance.

    NAN reports that the union’s demands include better conditions of service and payoff whenever the company decides to change its ownership.

    NAN also reports that the union had embarked on a warning strike on March

  • BREAKING: Resident doctors embark on nationwide strike

    BREAKING: Resident doctors embark on nationwide strike

    Members of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors on Thursday morning began a nationwide strike despite Federal Government’s final efforts to stop the action.

    The resident doctors, however, assured Nigerians that their action was not meant to hurt them.

    They made this known in a message posted on the association’s Twitter handle, @nard_nigeria, on Thursday morning.

    The message read, “Nigerians must understand that we love them and the strike is not intended to hurt them but to challenge the Nigerian government @MBuhari @Fmohnigeria @LabourMinNG whose responsibilities amongst others is to care for her citizens and labour force to do the needful.”

    The union’s President, Dr Uyilawa Okhuaihesuyi, also confirmed to Channels TV that the strike had commenced by 8am Thursday.

    The strike is happening at a time when the President Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), is in London for medical check-up.

     

  • ASUP threatens strike over unresolved issues

    ASUP threatens strike over unresolved issues

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), has threatened to embark on strike from April 6, over what it described as “unresolved issues with the Federal Government and some states.

    ASUP gave the notice in a communique at the end of its 99th National Executive Council meeting on Friday, in Katsina.

    In the communique, signed by its President, Mr Anderson Ezeibe, ASUP said the decision was to draw government’s attention to the need to release the 10 months arrears of the new minimum wage, owed its members in federal polytechnics.

    The association also demanded that some state governments should pay up arrears of the new minimum wage owed state polytechnic lecturers.

    “There is the need to implement the contents of the NEEDS Assessment report of 2014 in public polytechnics and similar institutions.

    “’Another issue also is the reconstitution of Governing Councils in all federal polytechnics and some state-owned polytechnics where such is yet to be constituted.

    “Others are the full implementation of the provisions of the Federal Polytechnics Act, as well as its domestication in Adamawa, Kano, Sokoto, Abia, Niger and other affected states”, it said.

    ASUP further called for the release of salaries owed staff in Abia, Ogun, Osun, Benue, Plateau, Edo and Cross River, as well as the implementation of full salary payments in Sokoto, Kaduna, Adamawa and others.

    It appealed to the government to withdraw the letter containing unsubstantiated claims of PAYE tax liabilities in 19 federal polytechnics.

    The communique also urged Kano and Kaduna governments, to implement the 65 years retirement age for academic staff in their tertiary institutions.

    The association, in the communique, concluded that; “By this resolution, ASUP members are requested to prepare for a full scale showdown until the union’s demands are met.”