The federal government has warned members of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) to shelve their planned five-day warning strike,premium times report.
The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, gave the warning on Tuesday in Abuja, shortly after receiving a letter of notification from the NARD executive on the planned strike.
Mr Ngige, in a statement signed by Olajide Oshundun, director, Press and Public Relations in the ministry, said the planned strike was illegal.
The impending industrial action is billed to begin by midnight of 16 May.
Mr Ngige, who was reacting to the letter, delivered to his office at about 5 p.m. the same day, said he contacted the Minister of Health, who informed him that a meeting has been scheduled with the resident doctors on Wednesday.
He therefore advised the doctors to avail themselves of the opportunity for social dialogue with their employer, rather than embark on a warning strike, which, he said, is unknown to the law.
According to him, I will advise them to attend the meeting with the Minister of Health tomorrow. I will also advise them very strongly not to go on a five-day warning strike.
“There is nothing like warning strike. A strike is a strike. If they want to take that risk, the options are there. It is their decision. They have the right to strike. You cannot deny them that right.
“But their employer has another right under Section 43 of the Trade Dispute Act, to withhold their pay for those five days. So, if the NARD has strike funds to pay their members for those five days, no problem.
“The health minister will instruct the teaching hospitals to employ adhoc people for those five days and they will use the money of the people who went on strike to pay the adhoc doctors.
“That is the ILO principles at decent work, especially for those rendering essential services. Lives should be protected. One of my sons is a resident doctor, I will advise him to go to work and sign the attendance register,” he said.
He added that the people seen at work are the ones to receive their pay. If you don’t work, there will be no pay, he said.
On the five demands of the doctors, Mr Ngige said the federal government lacks the powers to compel the states to domesticate the Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF).
He added that healthcare is on the residual list, where both the federal and state governments have the powers to legislate.
The minister also stated that the job of the federal government was to make policy and where the states disagree, they were at liberty to make their own policy.
He noted that the federal government cannot bully the states into domesticating the MRTF if they do not want to.
Regarding the issue of immediate payment of the MRTF to their members, he said it was appropriated in the 2023 budget but has not been released, as the 2022 budget was still running, adding that those in 2022 have all been paid.
Mr Ngige denied the claim by NARD that the federal government did not pay minimum wage consequential adjustment arrears to its members.
He added that all workers in the education and health sectors and even the defence agencies benefited from the adjustment.
He noted that the doctors cannot declare a nationwide strike because some states were owing their members, pointing out that the federal government cannot also dabble into the issue, being a state matter.