News
Nationwide Strike Looms In FG’s Hospitals
The Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) says it will embark on an indefinite strike on April 18, 2018 in all Federal Government’s medical institutions nationwide to protest against government’s failure to comply with salary structure adjustment agreement reached with the union, last September.
The National President of JOHESU, Comrade Biobele Moye stated this when he led other national officers of the union to the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH), Choba, last Friday to mobilise and sensitise members for a total strike over the dispute.
Moye said the strike became imperative following the inability of the Federal Government to implement the terms of the agreement reached with the union, last September, noting that members have exhausted all possible avenues of negotiation for peaceful resolution of the impasse.
He explained that the union entered into the agreement with the Federal Government on September 30, 2017, and insisted that the agreement should have been implemented within five weeks.
The JOHESU national president regretted that five months after, the Federal Government was yet to implement the said agreement.
He noted that the union has been considerate and patient, stressing that it has consulted widely, considered the economic situation but has decided to embark on confrontation with the Federal Government as the only option available to it.
‘’JOHESU has been a patient and focused organization”, Moye explained, and accused the Federal Government of endangering the lives of the people, if it allows the strike to go ahead.
‘’We are mindful of the role we play in the medical institutions. It is on this note that we have to consider, and we decided to give more time. We gave a 21 days compliance notice which expired on February 28, and another 30 working days beginning from March 5, which will end on April 17, 2018’’, he emphasised.
Moye noted that after April 17, all medical workers will down tools in all federal medical institutions nationwide.
He said JOHESU would only proceed on strike if it exhausts all possible avenues for dialogue, adding that the law required the union to give 15-day notice before proceeding on strike.
Moye said that it was due to JOHESU’s compassionate stance that the leadership has given six months gap to enable the government respond to its demands.
He said the last strike JOHESU embarked upon was in 2016, after the union had given the Federal Government 92-day notice, with another one year notice.
The JOHESU president explained that the said agreement was not signed by the minister of health alone but all parties involved, adding that the minister of labour, secretary to the government of the federation, permanent secretary, Ministry of Health, president of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), and other stakeholders all signed the agreement.
Ike Wigodo
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