You are currently viewing ‎BREAKING: Resident Doctors End Nationwide Strike After 29 Days

‎BREAKING: Resident Doctors End Nationwide Strike After 29 Days

‎The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has halted its nationwide strike, bringing an end to nearly a month of disruptions in federal and teaching hospitals.

‎The industrial action, which started on November 1, was formally suspended on Saturday after the association’s Extraordinary National Executive Council (NEC) met to review negotiations with the Federal Government. 

‎NARD’s Secretary General, Dr Shuaibu Ibrahim, confirmed the decision to suspend the industrial action.

‎Shuaibu said the union stepped down the strike after both parties signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) outlining seven outstanding issues the government must address. 

‎The issues, according to him, include recalling the dismissed resident doctors in Lokoja, issuing the long-awaited Professional Allowance Table, settling promotion and salary arrears in designated hospitals, upgrading doctors who passed Part I examinations, enforcing the correct entry point for new intakes, implementing specialist allowance, and resolving concerns around Membership Certificates.

‎He noted that two conditions have already been implemented, “The Professional Allowance Table has now been released, and the Head of Service has been instructed to adopt CONMESS 3 as the entry level for doctors. With these fulfilled, we have suspended the strike,” he said.

‎The remaining five items, he explained, are expected to be completed within four weeks under the timelines agreed in the MoU. 

‎Shuaibu warned that the association will not hesitate to down tools again if government agencies fail to deliver. 

‎“If the outstanding commitments are not met within the specified period, we will resume the strike,” he said.

‎The industrial action had left hospitals nationwide overstretched, as roughly 11,000 resident doctors across 91 teaching hospitals withdrew their services in protest over poor working conditions and delayed entitlements.


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