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Doctors List 19 Demands to Avert Indefinite Strike

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The Nigerian Associa­tion of Resident Doctors (NARD) has listed 19 de­mands which it described as the minimum expec­tations required to avert a total and indefinite na­tionwide strike scheduled to commence on Saturday.

The President, Dr. Mu­hammad Suleiman, stated this on Monday in Abuja at a media conference while presenting the resolutions of NARD’s Extraordinary National Executive Coun­cil (NEC) meeting.

The meeting followed the expiration of its 30-day ultimatum to the Federal Government.

He said the association had exercised patience for too long in the face of the government’s inac­tion, warning that doctors have already begun ward rounds and patient hando­ver ahead of the planned industrial action.

According to him, the outstanding payments and welfare issues affect not only resident doctors but all categories of health professionals, including administrative staff.

Suleiman said the gov­ernment currently owes doctors and other health workers across the country an estimated N38 billion in accumulated allowanc­es, some dating back more than 10 years.

He said, “There are al­lowances of over two years, some for 18 months, seven months, four months and even 10 years.

“There has also been a failure to review the basic salary of doctors in this country for 16 years.”

He noted that the asso­ciation had suspended a five-day warning strike in September and extended its earlier ultimatum by 30 days to allow the gov­ernment to address the demands, but the grace period had since elapsed without meaningful action.

“The Federal Govern­ment has failed to demon­strate the political will necessary to address the legitimate concerns of Ni­gerian resident doctors,” he said.

Suleiman explained that the 19-point demand presented by NARD rep­resents the minimum action expected from the government to prevent a total collapse of service delivery in the country’s public health system.

Among the demands, he said, are the immediate payment of outstanding 25–35 percent Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS) arrears and the 2024 accoutrement al­lowance to doctors, as well as other pending finan­cial entitlements owed to health workers.

The NEC also demanded the immediate reinstate­ment of five resident doc­tors unjustly terminated from the Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, with full payment of all outstanding salaries and allowances for the period of their disen­gagement.

He said the association further called on the Fed­eral Ministry of Health and Social Welfare to develop and implement a humane “working-hours policy” for doctors in line with inter­national best practices to safeguard both physician well-being and patient safety.

The NEC urged the gov­ernment to grant chief ex­ecutives of hospitals great­er autonomy to employ and replace doctors who exit the system through the immediate implemen­tation of the one-for-one replacement policy, to re­duce excessive workload and burnout.

It also demanded urgent upgrade and maintenance of infrastructure and medi­cal equipment in all health­care facilities nationwide to improve the quality of service delivery and train­ing for resident doctors.

Suleiman said NARD demanded the immediate commencement of special­ist allowance payments to all doctors, inclusion of medical and dental house officers in the civil service scheme with full entitle­ments, and correction of all entry-level placements of doctors.

He said the NEC also called for decentralisation of promotion processes, payment of arrears result­ing from those corrections, and expedited conclusion of the Collective Bargain­ing Agreement Commit­tee’s work on the long-over­due review of CONMESS and other professional al­lowances.

“The NEC further de­mands the immediate re­lease and implementation of corrected tables of pro­fessional allowances and clear enforcement of rela­tivity between CONMESS and CONHESS salary structures,” he added.

Other issues highlight­ed include the payment of accrued promotion arrears owed to medical officers, the reversal of the practice of creating consultant cad­res for non-medical person­nel, and the abolition of the casualisation of doctors, insisting that all locum staff must be regularised in accordance with public service rules.

Suleiman also noted that the association is demand­ing uniform implementa­tion of all CONMESS cir­culars across federal, state, and private health institu­tions and the immediate clearance of outstanding salary arrears owed to doc­tors in several centres.

He said NARD was also insisting on the immediate implementation of special pension benefits as earlier agreed between the Federal Government and the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA).

Following the failure of the government to meet these demands, Suleiman said, “NARD hereby de­clares a total, comprehen­sive, and indefinite strike commencing at 12:00 a.m. on Saturday.

“All resident doctors in federal and state tertiary health institutions na­tionwide are directed to withdraw their services completely and indefinite­ly until the Federal Gov­ernment and affected state governments demonstrate genuine commitment to addressing our demands,” he added.

The NARD president appealed to President Bola Tinubu to personally inter­vene to prevent the strike and address the lingering issues affecting doctors and the health sector.

“I hope you will listen to this passionate appeal and use your goodwill. You are the father of the nation. Come into this matter, weigh in on it, and solve it for us,” he said.

Over the years, NARD had embarked on several industrial actions to press home demands related to welfare, improved remu­neration, and better work­ing conditions.

Such industrial actions have often paralysed ser­vices in public hospitals across the country, leaving patients stranded and dis­rupting healthcare deliv­ery.

(Independent.ng)

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