The management of University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital
(UITH), Ilorin, has sharply criticised members of the hospital’s chapter of
Association of Resident Doctors (ARD)
for non-adherence to the rules of
industrial relations in their ongoing five-day warning strike, which today
entered its second day.
Besides, the management threatened to invoke the ‘no work, no
pay’ directives of the Federal Ministry of Health on the doctors if they failed
to call off the strike.
According to the management, at the end of its emergency
meeting yesterday, following the commencement of the strike, the doctors, in
their letter ARD/UITH /SEC/OUT/17/56, dated August 1, premised their action on
the decision reached at its emergency meeting of July 31, thereby depriving the
management the statutory adequate notification period before the declaration of
any form of industrial disputes.
It said the commencement of the strike on August 2, barely 24
hours after serving the notice, remained a “malicious action” and a deliberate
step aimed at shunning duties.
“The management wishes to register its displeasure of the
short notice of this current strike, which gave no window of engagement, and to
remind the association of the ‘no work, no pay’ directive of the Federal
Ministry of Health.
“Management, however, remains open to negotiations aimed at
stopping the present strike and preventing a recurrence of same.”The local ARD,
through its Chairman, Dr. Kolawole Ige, had cited non-payment of certain
emoluments of members by the management as the main reason for the strike.
But Head, Corporate Affairs Unit, of the hospital, Mrs.
Olufunmilayo Omojasola, insisted that management had always paid all the
resident doctors complete salaries as at when due, except on a few occasions
when funds were remitted late.
According to Guardian report, Despite the industrial disharmony, normal activities were
still going on unhindered at the hospital, as consultants, who have firmly
taken over the duties of the striking doctors, were attending directly to all
the patients.
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