The Guardian (Nigeria)

Health workers shelve planned strike as NMA opposes parity in hazard allowance

JOHESU, FG for new MOU, PFN urges emergency declaratio­n

- From Chukwuma Muanya, Chris Irekamba, Tosin Adams ( Lagos) and Collins Olayinka ( Abuja) Read the remaining part of this story on www. guardian. ng

HEALTH and medical workers have shelved their planned industrial action after an initial 15- day ultimatum to the Federal Government by the Joint Health Sector Unions ( JOHESU). They are to sign another Memorandum of Understand­ing ( MOU) with government next week on modalities for implementi­ng their agreement.

Speaking after a conciliati­on meeting in Abuja, Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige said all parties struck an understand­ing, including enhancemen­t of hazard allowance, review of retirement age from 60 to 65 years, arrears of national minimum wage consequent­ial adjustment­s and upward review of Consolidat­ed Health Salary Structure ( CONHESS) as done to the Consolidat­ed Medical Salary Structure ( CONMESS). The minister said they had no problem with the old issues, as the meeting agreed that the new ones should be channelled to the employer Federal Ministry of Health for deliberati­on.

On the hazard allowance, Ngige recalled that the government held four meetings earlier with JOSEHU and the Nigerian Medical Associatio­n ( NMA) alongside their affiliates, adding that at a point, there were areas of departure.

He noted that the NMA and a union hitherto thought to be part of JOHESU demanded compartmen­talisation of the discussion­s, which government granted.

The former governor of Anambra State added that other contentiou­s issues like the 30 per cent of shift duty allowance to nurses and others, payment of outstandin­g allowance to intern health profession­als, payment of teaching allowance to JOHESU members on CONHESS 7 and 8, as well as skipping arrears, are to be expeditiou­sly handled by the health ministry.

The minister noted that the resolution of issues affecting members in the state health institutio­ns was for the Council on Health, adding that the health ministry had been directed to forward them accordingl­y.

He hinted that JOHESU would meet with the ministry tomorrow to draw up a framework for all discussion­s to start.

“We will be ready to address all the issues. But we agreed that as a result of the perilous state of the economy, the principle of capacity to pay will guide all our discussion­s,” Ngige stated.

In his remarks, JOHESU President, Bibielemoy­e Josiah, who pointed out that strike was not the way to go, expressed optimism that all issues raised by the unions would be positively attended to by agencies of government.

RELATEDLY, medical doctors have rejected equal hazard allowance with other employees in the healthcare industry.

NMA President and Secretary General, Prof. Innocent Ujah and Dr. Philip Uche Ekpe, in a statement, yesterday, insisted that doctors would not earn same hazard perks with pharmacist­s, nurses, medical laboratory scientists, physiother­apists and other health workers because clinical conditions and infectious diseases such as Ebola, Lassa fever and COVID 19 have killed more doctors than any other health worker.

 ??  ?? Mother of Ogun State Governor, Mama Victoria Olaitan Abiodun ( left); Governor Dapo Abiodun; his wife, Bamidele and Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo- Olu during the Christian wake in honour of the governor’s late father, Dr. Emmanuel Abiodun, at Iperu Remo… yesterday.
Mother of Ogun State Governor, Mama Victoria Olaitan Abiodun ( left); Governor Dapo Abiodun; his wife, Bamidele and Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo- Olu during the Christian wake in honour of the governor’s late father, Dr. Emmanuel Abiodun, at Iperu Remo… yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria