The Joint Health Sector
Union has taken the Nigeria Medical Association to court for going on
strike, claiming that the NMA lacks the constitutional right to do so.
Joined in the suit are the Federal
Ministry of Health, the Federal Ministry of Labour and Productivity, the
Registrar of trade unions, and the Attorney-General of the Federation.
Speaking at a press conference called by
JOHESU in Ibadan on Wednesday, the General Secretary of the Senior Staff
Association of Universities, Teaching Hospitals, Research Institutes
and Associated Institutions, Moshood Akinade, said the doctors acted in
an unprofessional manner by their refusal to treat patients, adding that
COHESU has challenged the action of the doctors in court.
Among other things, COHESU is challenging
the constitutional rights of NMA to call for a strike particularly when
it is not a legally registered trade union.
“We have presented eight points in court
which will show that NMA is acting unconstitutionally when the court
rules. Their strike is illegal and all what the doctors want is to
scuttle the effort and agreement that JOHESU has reached with the
Federal Government.
The doctors are punishing the masses and
denying them the right to medical care in government hospitals. The
patients can institute a joint action against the doctors if they wish
to fight back,” Akinade said. He went further to list some of the
demands that JOHESU wanted the court to declare, saying “NMA and its
incorporated trustees as well as associates and allies like Medical and
Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria and Association of Resident
Doctors are not trade union organisations so they have no legal rights
to declare a strike.
“They also don’t have the legal right to
disrupt the career progression of members of COHESU in teaching
hospitals, general hospitals, clinics, federal medical centres and state
institutions where our members are employees.
“We want the court to declare their
action null and void because only registered trade union organisations
can declare a trade dispute, down tool, embark on a strike or a protest.
We also seek an order of the court deeming the industrial action
embarked upon by the doctors since July 1, 2014 as illegal,
unconstitutional, unprofessional and ultra vires.”
JOHESU alleged that NMA was working
against its members by making demands that would limit the career peak
to which non-doctors could reach in the health sector and that the
doctors were the biggest beneficiaries of the strike because patients
now patronise their hospitals.
0 comments:
Post a Comment