Governor
Rauf Aregbesola of Osun state have stopped payment of salaries to the state
government's medical doctors over a strike which started since September 28,
last year, Punch reports.
The
state government had threatened to sack all the striking doctors if they failed
to resume work on December 25. The doctors dared the governor but the next step
which would be taken by the governor was not known yet.
The
President of the Association of Resident Doctors at the Ladoke Akintola
University of Technology, Osogbo, Dr. Adeyinka Owolabi, said that doctors had
not been paid since October.
Owolabi said
doctors would not accept half salaries like other workers in the state because
their salaries were the least among doctors throughout the country and they
were being forced to pay the highest tax.
The ARD president
said it was dangerous to ask hungry doctors to be attending to patients, saying
many doctors had become a laughing stock because of their inability to meet
their obligations.
Owolabi said, “It
is true that the state government has stopped our salaries. I am not sure if
there was a circular to that effect but we did not receive the October and
November salaries alerts like other workers.
“There is no end
in sight to the strike. The salary is the main cause of this strike and we can
never accept half salaries because we are not going to give our patients half
treatment. The government is adamant and we are also not going to shift ground
on this.”
Owolabi, however,
stated that the doctors would reconsider their position if the state government
could sign an agreement that it was owing doctors half salaries, stating when
the balance would be paid.
The Chairman of
the Nigerian Medical Association in Osun State, Dr. Suraj Ogunyemi, said the
striking doctors and the state government had remained adamant on the issues.
Ogunyemi, who said
he thought the state government would have found a solution to the strike
before the dawn of the New Year, said it was unfortunate that the action had
dragged for over three months.
But the Consultant
to the State Government on Information, Mr. Sunday Akere, when contacted said
the state government had been making efforts to ensure that the strike was
called off.
Akere said he
believed “something better will happen this week.”
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