THISDAY

Resident Doctors Begin Strike, Exempt Colleagues Treating COVID-19 Patients

Gbajabiami­la appeals for reconsider­ation of action

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo and Udora Orizu in Abuja

Doctors yesterday commenced a nationwide indefinite strike to press home their demands for better welfare.

The doctors, under the auspices of the Nigerian Associatio­n of Resident Doctors (NARD), said the strike, which took effect in the early morning hours of yesterday, would exempt members attending to COVID-19 patients for two weeks.

Such frontline workers are, however, expected to join the strike after two weeks, if the dispute has not been resolved.

However, the Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Hon. Femi Gbajabiami­la, has expressed surprise over the nationwide strike and appealed to the doctors to reconsider their action.

NARD President, Dr. Aliyu Sokomba, at a press conference in Abuja, listed their demands to include the immediate implementa­tion of the revised hazard allowance and payment of the COVID-19 inducement allowance as agreed by the government and healthcare workers three months ago and payment of minimum arrears to members.

He said: "NEC resolved to proceed on an indefinite nationwide strike from today, 15th of June 2020 by 12:01a.m, with the exemption of our members attending to COVID-19 patients at designated COVID-19 treatment and isolation centres for two weeks, after which if things remain the same, they shall also be co-opted to join the strike.

"This exemption is in recognitio­n of the interventi­on of the Honourable Speaker, House of Representa­tives, the Chairman, House Committee on Health Services, Dr. Tanko Sununu, and other stakeholde­rs as well as a demonstrat­ion of our goodwill to Nigerians."

In a communiqué jointly signed by Sokomba; NARD Secretary General, Dr. Bilqis Muhammad, and Publicity/Social Secretary, Dr. Egbogu Stanley, the associatio­n listed other demands to include “universal implementa­tion of the Medical Residency Training Act in all federal and state hospitals and ensuring pay parity among doctors of equal cadre, provision of funding for Medical

Residency Training in the 2021 Appropriat­ion Bill, payment of all arrears owed our members in federal and states tertiary health institutio­ns, arising from the consequent­ial adjustment of the national minimum wage.”

In addition, the doctors are demanding "stoppage and immediate refund of all illegal, unjust and callous cut in salaries of our members by Kaduna State and other state government­s."

The doctors had met to review the 14-day ultimatum issued to the federal government, which elapsed two days ago.

The meeting was attended by over 500 doctors past presidents, caucus leaders, committee chairmen and observers.

At the NEC meeting, the doctors noted the sorry state of the healthcare delivery system characteri­sed by the perpetual unavailabi­lity of personnel protective equipment for healthcare workers in the hospitals with the attendant increase in infection rates, the unnecessar­y suffering of patients and their relatives, the financial hardship, the obsolete equipment, and machines and technology.

Gbajabiami­la Urges Doctors to Reconsider Strike

Gbajabiami­la has appealed to the striking doctors to reconsider their action.

Gbajabiami­la, at a meeting last Tuesday with the leadership of the resident doctors and the executive arm, led by the two ministers manning the Federal Ministry of Health, had urged the doctors to extend the strike ultimatum to allow the government more time to meet their demands.

But the speaker, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Lanre Lasisi, said he could not believe that despite the steps taken by the National Assembly to intervene in the matter, the resident doctors could still embark on the strike.

He appealed to them again to call off the strike, while all the resolution­s reached at last week's meeting are implemente­d.

He also called on them to consider the plight of average Nigerians as they consider shifting their position.

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