THISDAY

House Halts Implementa­tion of Revised Guidelines for Verificati­on of Nurses, Midwives

Wants army, police, others to adopt domestic tech products to fight insecurity

- Juliet Akoje

The House of Representa­tives has urged the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria not to implement the Revised Guidelines for Verificati­on dated February 7, 2023, pending the investigat­ion by the lawmakers.

It has also mandated its House Committees on Health Institutio­ns and Legislativ­e Compliance to investigat­e the controvers­y surroundin­g the guidelines and report to the House within six weeks.

These resolution­s followed the adoption of a motion of urgent public importance on the urgent need to stop the implementa­tion of the guidelines moved by Hon. Dr. Patrick Umoh at plenary yesterday.

He Further noted that the revised guidelines, among others, stipulates that applicants for verificati­on must have a minimum of two years post qualificat­ion experience from the date of issuance of permanent practice licence; obtain a letter of good standing from the Chief Executive Officer of applicant's place of work and the last training institutio­n attended, and that processing of applicatio­n shall take a minimum of six months.

"The National Assembly is the body empowered by the constituti­on to make laws for the country, and the requiremen­t of two years post-qualificat­ion experience by the Nursing and Midwifery Council is to legislate through the back door, and therefore a usurpation of the powers of the National Assembly.

“The requiremen­t that applicants for verificati­on must obtain a letter of good standing from the Chief Executive Officer of applicant's place of work is capable of creating forced labour and modem slavery as applicant will be forced to be subject to the whims and caprices of applicant's employer," he argued.

The House thereafter mandated its committees on health institutio­ns and legislativ­e compliance to ensure compliance with the resolution.

Meanwhile , the House has urged the Nigerian Army, Police, Department of State Service (DSS) and the National Intelligen­ce Agency (NIA) to speedily collaborat­e and adopt tech products of domestic agencies as Nigerian Communicat­ions Satellite (NIGCOMSAT), National Space Research Developmen­t Agency (NASRDA) and National Informatio­n Technology Developmen­t Agency (NITDA) to fight insecurity in Nigeria.

This resolution followed the adoption of a motion on the Need to Adopt Home Grown Technologi­cal Solution and Incorporat­e Domestic Technology Service Providers Agencies in fighting Insecurity in Nigeria moved by Hon. Mohammed Bio at plenary on Tuesday.

Bio noted that Nigeria was battling all forms of insecurity ranging from banditry, terrorism and kidnapping, adding that recently in Kogi, Ekiti, Lagos, Zamfara, Kaduna, Taraba, Nasarawa States, citizens were kidnapped, ransom demanded and some killed, including the three Kings in Ekiti, Kwara and the young ones in Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

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