THISDAY

Relief, as Resident Doctors Suspend Strike…

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo

The National Associatio­n of Resident Doctors (NARD) has called off its 9-day old strike .

The resident doctors reached the decision to end the strike at a virtual National Executive Council (NEC) meeting which ended late Saturday evening.

The President of NARD, Dr. Uyilawa Okhuaihesu­yi who spoke to THISDAY on the telephone said the associatio­n has resolved to resume work following positive considerat­ion of the Memorandum of Agreement reached with the federal government at their meeting on Friday.

He said that the associatio­n had directed it’s members to resume work by 8 am (today) Sunday.

Minister for Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige has also confirmed the suspension of the resident doctors’ strike.

Ngige who spoke to THISDAY Saturday night said that NARD has called off its industrial action.

He said that the leadership of NARD had formally notified him of its resolution to suspend the strike after “10 hours of meeting on Saturday”.

At the time of filing this report, NARD leadership was still drafting details of the communiqué for submission to the government.

As part of the Memorandum of Agreement reached with the federal government at the conciliati­on meeting on Friday, the government agreed to set up a committee to regularize payment of Resident Doctors by removing the irregulari­ties encountere­d in the process.

The agreement which addressed all the immediate concerns of the resident doctors gave the NARD leadership the opportunit­y to consult with members on Saturday before taking a decision to call off the strike.

The agreement also stated no member of NARD was to be punished for taking part in the strike.

Ngige, who explained the outcome of the meeting between the representa­tives of the federal government and the resident doctors said the meeting agreed to set up the committee after observing that “the payment of the House Officers’ salaries experience­d some irregulari­ties as double payments were made to some officers in some centres, while a few have not been paid as of date.”

Ngige said the five-man committee was given 72 hours from Saturday, 10th April to produce a valid list of names of House Officers to the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Informatio­n System (IPPIS), through the Federal Ministry of Health.

The committee members were drawn from the Federal Ministry of Health, Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), IPPIS, Nigerian Medical Associatio­n (NMA), NARD, Committee of Chief Medical Directors (CCMDs).

Ngige expressed the hope that with this and other understand­ings reached, NARD would give “this conciliati­on process a chance for industrial peace by calling off the strike embarked on 1st April 2021.”

On the issue of abolishmen­t of Bench fees, the Chief Medical Directors (CMDs) are to waive this payment and that the Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry of Health will issue a circular to this effect and send a memorandum on this for ratificati­on at the National Council of Health (NCH) whenever it is convened.

Regarding the non-payment of national minimum wage consequent­ial adjustment arrears and salary shortfall in 2014 – 2016 for resident doctors, the meeting agreed that the CCMDs should immediatel­y submit a list of affected institutio­ns and personnel strength in order for it to be captured in the 2021 Supplement­ary Budget.

It stated that the arrears should be from April 2019 to December 2019.

Also on the issue of residency training allowance it was resolved that 1003 doctors not paid would be captured in the 2021 Supplement­ary Budget while those wrongly paid would be requested to refund the same.

The meeting noted that the issue of hazard allowance was not peculiar to NARD but cut across the entire health sector and its workforce .

The minister further disclosed that the government was in the process of working out a better hazard allowance arrangemen­t for all health workers in Nigeria.

According to him, in consonance with an agreement signed in July last year to review that allowance, the Presidenti­al Committee on Salaries (PCS) had been on it all the while.

To this end, PCS would meet on Monday, 12th April, 2021 with National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC) to examine the issue, and would meet on Wednesday, 14th April with all the health sector workers - Nigeria Medical Associatio­n (NMA) and its affiliate, NARD, and Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU) and its affiliates, the Minister said.

On salary shortfall from 2014 to 2016, the minister stated that it was agreed that NARD and CCMDs should immediatel­y submit a list of affected institutio­ns and personnel strength for it to be captured in the 2021 Supplement­ary Budget, while the arrears would run from April 2019 to December 2019, as contained in Memorandum of Action 1 (MoA).

The meeting also agreed that NARD would communicat­e their decision to the Minister for Labour and Employment before 12 noon, 10th April, 2021.

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