Tag: NARD

  • NARD applauds Tinubu’s role, keeps strike suspension under review

    NARD applauds Tinubu’s role, keeps strike suspension under review

    The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has hailed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for his intervention in resolving the ongoing standoff with the Federal Government over members’ welfare and the state of health-sector infrastructure.

    While the union expressed appreciation for the Federal Government’s commitment, as conveyed by President Bola Tinubu through Vice President Kashim Shettima, it stated that the agreement, which led to the suspension of its “Total Strike 2.0,” remained subject to review within two weeks.

    The union warned that failure to fully implement the immediate reinstatement of two of the seven previously disengaged doctors could become a fresh source of contention.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Abuja, the NARD President, Dr Mohammad Suleiman, flanked by union executives, insisted that the recommendation to transfer two of he union’s members out of the Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, was unacceptable and firmly rejected by the association.

    He explained that although discussions are ongoing, the association has made it unequivocally clear that the redeployment of the affected doctors is unacceptable, warning that such a move could set a dangerous precedent for collective labour action nationwide.

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    “There is a clear commitment that all our members should return to Lokoja. Anything short of that is unacceptable to us,” Suleiman said, stressing that allowing transfers could legitimise punitive redeployments of union leaders for legitimate labour agitation.

    Praising the government for the steps taken so far to avert a nationwide strike, Suleiman highlighted several of the union’s demands that have recorded measurable progress in their resolution.

    On welfare matters, NARD disclosed that the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare has formally communicated with the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation on the implementation of the corrected professional allowance, adding that the provision has been captured in the 2026 budget proposal.

    The association also confirmed that, following interventions by key stakeholders, the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment has written to the Ministry of Finance and the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation regarding the urgent need to clear the outstanding 25.5 per cent CONMESS arrears.

    Suleiman expressed optimism that payment would be expedited.

    He also said promotion arrears owed to medical officers from 2020 to 2024 have been forwarded to the Ministry of Finance, noting that discussions are ongoing and that assurances have been received that a payment plan will be developed soon.

    Similarly, salary arrears owed to four federal health institutions have been transmitted from the Ministry of Health to the Ministry of Finance, with engagements continuing on an expanded payment framework.

    Suleiman also confirmed that the Federal Ministry of Health has communicated with Chief Medical Directors nationwide on the approved entry level for medical doctors in the civil service, in line with the directive of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation.

    The NARD president confirmed that the letters have been acknowledged by the relevant implementing authorities.

    The union commended the constitution of a multi-stakeholder committee comprising the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria, the Committee of Chief Medical Directors, the Postgraduate Medical Colleges and NARD, chaired by the Director of Hospital Services, to address issues of membership certificate recategorisation and the non-issuance of Part I postgraduate certificates.

    But it made several demands calling for the swift resolution of House Officers’ welfare concerns, immediate implementation of the professional allowance from January 2026 with payment of all arrears, and sustained engagement to clear outstanding salary and allowance arrears across federal and state health institutions.

    It also rejected the proposed six-month job evaluation timeline, demanded urgent intervention to address decaying infrastructure and obsolete equipment, and called for the reconvening of the Special Pension Benefits Committee alongside accelerated implementation of all previously agreed demands.

    Based on these developments, NARD stated that it has given the Federal Government a two-week window to implement the agreed-upon measures, after which the situation will be reviewed at the association’s National Executive Council (NEC) meeting later this month.

    Praising Vice President Shettima for his intervention, and noting that he acted on behalf of the President and demonstrated strong commitment to resolving the dispute, Suleiman said, “If we did not believe in the sincerity and capacity of the Vice President, we would already be on strike,” NARD said, explaining that the decision to shelve industrial action was based on agreed timelines and visible progress.

    Addressing concerns over the reported ₦90 billion allocation for health sector remuneration, he clarified that the 2026 budget proposal is still before the National Assembly and that remuneration-related provisions could be captured under different budget components, including personnel costs and service-wide votes.

    While he recalled that previous arrears were lost when service-wide votes were suspended in successive budget cycles, forcing President Tinubu in 2025 to make special provisions to clear them, Suleiman said it was that development that informed the union’s insistence on firm budgetary guarantees before suspending strike action.

    “It is not about whether ₦90 billion has been sighted in the budget yet,” he said, noting that less than 20 per cent of the amount would go to resident doctors, with the bulk benefiting other health workers and senior doctors.

    He urged the public to focus on the broader issue of healthcare worker welfare and system sustainability, while reaffirming NARD’s commitment to continued engagement with the Federal Government and the National Assembly.

  • NARD applauds Tinubu’s role, keeps strike suspension under review

    NARD applauds Tinubu’s role, keeps strike suspension under review

    The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has commended President Bola Tinubu for his intervention in resolving the ongoing standoff with the Federal Government over members’ welfare and the state of health-sector infrastructure in the country.

    While the union expressed appreciation for the Federal Government’s commitment, as conveyed by President Bola Tinubu through Vice President Kashim Shettima, it stated that the agreement, which led to the suspension of its “Total Strike 2.0,” remains subject to review within two weeks. 

    The union further warned that failure to fully implement the immediate reinstatement of two of the seven previously disengaged doctors could become a fresh source of contention.

    Speaking at a press briefing in Abuja on Tuesday, the NARD President, Dr Mohammad Suleiman, flanked by union executives, insisted that the recommendation to transfer two of its members out of the Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, is unacceptable and firmly rejected by the association.

    He explained that although discussions are ongoing, the association has made it unequivocally clear that the redeployment of the affected doctors is unacceptable, warning that such a move could set a dangerous precedent for collective labour action nationwide.

    “There is a clear commitment that all our members should return to Lokoja. Anything short of that is unacceptable to us,” Suleiman said, stressing that allowing transfers could legitimise punitive redeployments of union leaders for legitimate labour agitation.

    While commending the government for the steps taken so far to avert a nationwide strike, Suleiman highlighted several of the union’s demands that have recorded measurable progress in their resolution.

    On welfare matters, NARD disclosed that the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare has formally communicated with the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation on the implementation of the corrected professional allowance, adding that the provision has been captured in the 2026 budget proposal.

    The association also confirmed that, following interventions by key stakeholders, the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment has written to the Ministry of Finance and the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation regarding the urgent need to clear the outstanding 25.5 percent CONMESS arrears. 

    Suleiman expressed optimism that payment would be expedited.

    In addition, he said promotion arrears owed to medical officers from 2020 to 2024 have been forwarded to the Ministry of Finance, noting that discussions are ongoing and that assurances have been received that a payment plan will be developed soon.

    Similarly, salary arrears owed to four federal health institutions have been transmitted from the Ministry of Health to the Ministry of Finance, with engagements continuing on an expanded payment framework.

    Suleiman also confirmed that the Federal Ministry of Health has communicated with Chief Medical Directors nationwide on the approved entry level for medical doctors in the civil service, in line with the directive of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation. 

    The NARD president confirmed that the letters have been acknowledged by relevant implementing authorities.

    The union commended the constitution of a multi-stakeholder committee comprising the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria, the Committee of Chief Medical Directors, the Postgraduate Medical Colleges and NARD, chaired by the Director of Hospital Services, to address issues of membership certificate recategorisation and the non-issuance of Part I postgraduate certificates. 

    However, it made several demands callinh for the swift resolution of House Officers’ welfare concerns, immediate implementation of the professional allowance from January 2026 with payment of all arrears, and sustained engagement to clear outstanding salary and allowance arrears across federal and state health institutions. 

    It also rejected the proposed six-month job evaluation timeline, demanded urgent intervention to address decaying infrastructure and obsolete equipment, and called for the reconvening of the Special Pension Benefits Committee alongside accelerated implementation of all previously agreed demands.

    Based on these developments, NARD stated that it has given the Federal Government a two-week window to implement the agreed-upon measures, after which the situation will be reviewed at the association’s National Executive Council (NEC) meeting later this month.

    Read Also: BREAKING: NARD suspends nationwide strike

    Praising Vice President Shettima for his intervention, and noting that he acted on behalf of the President and demonstrated strong commitment to resolving the dispute, Suleiman said, “If we did not believe in the sincerity and capacity of the Vice President, we would already be on strike,” NARD said, explaining that the decision to shelve industrial action was based on agreed timelines and visible progress.

    Addressing concerns over the reported ₦90 billion allocation for health sector remuneration, he clarified that the 2026 budget proposal is still before the National Assembly and that remuneration-related provisions could be captured under different budget components, including personnel costs and service-wide votes.

    While he recalled that previous arrears were lost when service-wide votes were suspended in successive budget cycles, forcing President Tinubu in 2025 to make special provisions to clear them, Suleiman said it was that development that informed the union’s insistence on firm budgetary guarantees before suspending strike action.

    “It is not about whether ₦90 billion has been sighted in the budget yet,” he said, noting that less than 20 percent of the amount would go to resident doctors, with the bulk benefiting other health workers and senior doctors.

    He urged the public to focus on the broader issue of healthcare worker welfare and system sustainability, while reaffirming NARD’s commitment to continued engagement with the Federal Government and the National Assembly.

  • NARD exco meets over planned strike, court’s restraining order

    NARD exco meets over planned strike, court’s restraining order

    Ahead of a nationwide strike scheduled for Monday, the Nigeria Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) is set to begin a virtual National Executive Council (NEC) meeting while insisting that it remains focused on its demands despite a court order restraining the industrial action.

    The strike, initially planned for Monday, 12 January 2026, came amid growing tensions over unfulfilled demands, until the Federal Government secured a restraining order from the National Industrial Court on Friday, 9 January 2026.

    There are, however, indications that the union’s decision to strike is guided solely by the outcome of internal deliberations, rather than government pressure, the restraining court order, or the possible invocation of a no-work, no-pay policy.

    A source familiar with the development, who pleaded anonymity, told The Nation that, “The Executive Council meeting will be starting now, so once we round up, the information will spread everywhere.

    “We are only focused on our issues; the court order is not our concern. It’s what we are able to get from the government that will prevent it (strike). It’s not the court restraining order.

    Read Also: NARD: why we suspended strike

    “We are not intimidated by the court order, so it’s not the issue of the court order we are discussing; it is what has been so far accomplished,” the official said.

    He emphasised that the union’s priority is the government’s response to their demands, rather than any legal or police intervention.

    “Even before the court order came, we had already decided we were going to have this meeting. So, it’s what the government was able to do that we are currently concerned with; it’s not the issue of any court action.

    “We have had similar issues in the past, and we know how we will find our way, so that’s not our major concern now.

    “Are we able to get the minimum demand? That’s what we are going to analyse at the E-NEC, for the members to look critically and make decisions,” he said.

    When pressed further on whether the government has met any of the union’s demands since the last update, the source declined to reveal, pleading patience while promising that the outcome would soon be made public.

  • We’re not intimidated by court order-Resident doctors

    We’re not intimidated by court order-Resident doctors

    Following the court order obtained by the Federal government restraining the Nigeria Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) from embarking on its planned nationwide strike from next week, the association has declared that it is not intimidated by the court injunction restraining industrial action insisting that its planned nationwide strike remains on course unless the Federal Government demonstrates genuine and practical steps toward meeting the doctors’ demands

    Speaking on a national television evening magazine programme on Friday, NARD President Dr Mohammad Suleiman said resident doctors had anticipated the government’s no work no pay policy and court action long before the injunction was issued

    “Indeed I can tell you my members are not perturbed My members are not shaking at all We actually envisioned this

    “Even when we went on the NARD strike, total independence and comprehensive 1.0 at the latter part of last year, we anticipated no work, no pay, or even a court injunction. These things were factored into the decision to embark on this action,” he said.

    He dismissed the injunction as neither new nor unexpected citing past confrontations between resident doctors and previous administrations

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    “I can tell you for free that in 2014 the previous government sparked the entirety of resident doctors in Nigeria This is not new or strange in Nigeria,” he noted.

    Suleiman said the resolve of resident doctors remained firm despite threats of sanctions adding that the issues at stake justified the action

    “They should go ahead and throw the no-work-no-pay. They are throwing court injunctions, we are looking at it, probably even mass sacking of doctors will follow, but the resolve of my members is not shaking at all,” Suleiman affirmed.

    However, the NARD president said the association was not closed to dialogue and would be willing to reconsider its position if the government shows concrete evidence of good faith

    “We have nothing but respect for the Honourable Coordinating Minister for Health Professor Mohammed Pate and the Honourable Minister of State for Health Adekunle Salako These are senior colleagues in the profession

    “But let us dwell on the issues We suspended our action based on the Memorandum of Understanding we signed. After that, we wrote a reminder letter in the middle of December. We made several visits to many agencies of government, but nothing moved,” he noted regrettably.

    He explained that the association only began hearing of government action after it announced the resumption of the strike raising concerns about the sincerity of the response

    “After we declared that we are resuming the strike we started hearing in newspapers and on social media that movements were being made. Up until now, a lot of things are still in the process and in the pipeline,” he added.

    According to him, NARD has 16 outstanding demands, and the National Executive Council NEC insists they must be resolved conclusively, noting, “What the NEC is saying is take these issues to finality. There are 16 items on that table and these issues must be resolved.

    Responding to government claims that seven of the demands had been met including payment of arrears Suleiman disputed the figures, Suleiman disagreed, explaining, “We still have over 2000 almost 3000 of our members that are yet to be paid the 25 to 35 percent arrears

    These arrears were said to be put inside the service-wide vote in 2023; they were not paid. In 2024, they were put there, they were not paid, in 2025 they were put there again,” he noted, stressing that resident doctors were tired of waiting for special presidential interventions to access payments

    “The demand is to capture it in the budget; it is no retreat, no surrender,” he added.

    Suleiman criticised the timing of the court injunction and the no-work-no-pay threats describing them as hostile tactics while negotiations were ongoing

    “When we are discussing and we are at the negotiating table, we should do it in good faith. By the time you begin to bring out armouries and arms like this, you do not want to negotiate,” he noted

    Addressing concerns about the impact of the strike on patients Suleiman said the suffering of doctors and the health system could no longer be ignored

    “Are we ignoring the suffering that doctors are going through in this country? Are we ignoring the suffering patients go through because doctors are exhausted, frustrated and tired?” he asked.

    The NARD President, however, disclosed that talks with the government were still ongoing and expressed cautious optimism that tangible actions could lead to a shift in NARD’s position

    “Right now we are in conversations with the federal government team I would hope that from tonight to Sunday a lot of things will be done in the proper way

    “If these conversations lead to palpable things on the ground the NEC will favourably look at it. Once those gains drop I can tell you NEC will review its position,” he assured.

    Suleiman also dismissed allegations that NARD was acting on behalf of political interests

    “I am a clinician I am a doctor, I have never been involved in politics. We are resident doctors and we only serve Nigerian patients,” he emphasized.

  • LASUTH-ARD backs NARD’s indefinite strike

    LASUTH-ARD backs NARD’s indefinite strike

    The Lagos State University Teaching Hospital Association of Resident Doctors (LASUTH-ARD) has declared full support for the resumption of the nationwide strike by the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), scheduled to begin on Monday, January 12. 

    Speaking at a press briefing, the President of LASUTH-ARD, Dr. Akerele Alaba, said resident doctors in LASUTH would fully comply with the directive of the national body to resume the Total Indefinite and Comprehensive Strike (TICS 2.0), tagged “No Implementation, No Going Back.”

    Dr. Akerele recalled that NARD had embarked on a nationwide strike on November 1, 2025, which was suspended on November 29, 2025, following the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Federal Government on November 27. 

    According to him, the agreement covered 19 demands expected to be implemented within one month.

    “The federal government has failed to fulfill its own part of the agreement. Many of the items have been totally neglected, altered, or only half implemented,” he said.

    He disclosed that the decision to resume the strike followed resolutions reached at NARD’s Extraordinary National Executive Council (E-NEC) meeting held virtually on January 2, 2026. 

    At the meeting, NEC resolved to resume TICS 2.0, mandated centre presidents to hold congress meetings and directed centre-based protests from January 12 to 16, 2026. 

    This will be followed by regional and national protests coordinated by the NARD National Officers’ Committee.

    Dr. Akerele confirmed that LASUTH-ARD held its congress on Sunday, with members fully endorsing the strike action.

    He explained that NEC would only consider suspending TICS 2.0 after the full implementation of key minimum demands, including the reinstatement of the FTH Lokoja five, payment of promotion and salary arrears, full implementation of the professional allowance table with arrears captured in the 2026 budget, reintroduction of the Specialist Allowance, resolution of house officers’ salary delays, and the resumption of the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) process.

    The LASUTH-ARD president highlighted several unresolved local welfare concerns affecting resident doctors in Lagos State. These include the abandonment of the Resident Doctors’ Quarters project, unpaid advancement arrears, exclusion of resident doctors from housing and pension schemes, non-payment of teaching allowances to registrars and house officers, and the unpaid December 2025 bonus.

    He also called on the Lagos State Government to ensure timely payment of the 2026 Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF), while appreciating the state government for its consistent yearly payment of the fund.

    Dr. Akerele appealed to the Lagos State Government to urgently address these issues, stressing that the strike decision, though difficult, was taken in the collective interest of doctors’ welfare, dignity, and the sustainability of healthcare delivery nationwide.

    He added that resident doctors in LASUTH were currently rendering full services but would comply with the strike directive once it takes effect.

  • Strike: NARD denies opposition influence

    Strike: NARD denies opposition influence

    •Union rejects gov’s MoU execution claims
    •Seeks evidence of N90b budget allocation

    The National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has dismissed the claim that its renewed strike threat was politically motivated.

    The union insisted that the action had become inevitable after weeks of unmet agreements, shifting government positions, and worsening welfare conditions for doctors.

    This comes as the union rejected assertions that its Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the government, which led to the suspension of a previous strike, had been implemented, stressing that none of the agreed demands has been fulfilled since the signing, including the reported N90 billion allocation for health workers’ allowances in this year’s budget.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Abuja, the NARD National President, Dr. Mohammad Suleiman, accompanied by other union leaders, said the association’s position was driven solely by the obligation to protect the welfare and safety of its members, not by partisan interests.

    The union leader said it would be illogical for resident doctors to align with political actors who lack the authority to address their grievances.

    “Now, do you think I want to spoil the chances of my members getting their due diligence by going to romance with opposition? Is the opposition in government? Do they have the responsibility to solve this problem? It is the people in government who have the responsibility to solve this problem,” Suleiman said.

    The NARD president said the union remained committed to engaging the current administration because it believes the government has both the mandate and capacity to resolve the issues between both sides.

    “There is a government in power. We are loyal and responsible patriotic Nigerians. We believe that the government can solve our problems.

    “If we do not believe that this government can solve our problems, we will not have even brought it to their table in the first place. We have the conviction that this government can solve this problem. As a union leader, I cannot afford not to have the conviction that this government can solve our problems.”

    Appealing directly to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to intervene decisively in the health sector crisis, Suleiman said: “We believe this government is responsive and responsible. We believe that the President of the country, President Bola Tinubu, will hear our cry.

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    “He will hear our call to him to come in and attend to the welfare of not just resident doctors but the entire health sector once and for all.”

    Explaining why the union’s strike had become unavoidable, the NARD president said agreements reached with the Federal Government had repeatedly stalled, with new conditions introduced and some even reversed without consultation.

    “Now, today, what we are hearing is that the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC) has to do a job evaluation before CBA can continue. That job evaluation must last six months. This has not been communicated to us, but it has been communicated to Nigeria’s public freely today in the media. So, it is like the goalpost keeps changing,” he said.

    The union leader expressed doubt that the delays would end, even if fresh conditions were met.

    He added: “I have the utmost confidence that even if the NSIWC finishes the job evaluation today, another reason will be concocted as to why CBA cannot continue.

    “So, perhaps it is time to come clean, not just to Nigerians, but to come clean to all healthcare workers. I think if the Federal Government is not interested in this issue, they should make it clear they are not interested in this issue,” he said.

    Suleiman stressed that attempts to portray a picture of divisions among health workers were misleading.

  • NARD rejects political motive claims over renewed strike threat

    NARD rejects political motive claims over renewed strike threat

    • …rejects government’s MoU execution claims
    • …seeks evidence of ₦90 billion budget allocation

    The National Association of Resident Doctors on Tuesday dismissed claims that its renewed threat of industrial action was politically motivated, insisting the move had become unavoidable after weeks of unmet, shifting government positions, and deteriorating welfare conditions for doctors.

    The association also rejected assertions that its Memorandum of Understanding with the government, which led to the suspension of an earlier strike, had been implemented. It maintained that none of the agreed demands had been fulfilled since the signing of the MoU, including the reported ₦90 billion allocation for health workers’ allowances in the 2026 budget.

    Speaking at a press briefing in Abuja, NARD President, Dr. Mohammad Suleiman, alongside other union leaders, said the association’s stance was driven solely by the need to safeguard the welfare and safety of its members, not by partisan considerations.

    Suleiman described as illogical any suggestion that resident doctors would align with political actors who lack the authority to resolve their grievances.

    “Now, you think I want to spoil the chances of my members getting their due diligence by going into romance with the opposition. Is the opposition in government? Do they have the responsibility to solve this problem? It is the people in government who have the responsibility to solve this problem,” he said.

    He added that NARD remains committed to engaging the current administration, expressing confidence that it has both the mandate and the capacity to address the issues raised by the union.

    “There is a government in power. And we are loyal and responsible patriotic Nigerians who believe that the government can solve our problems.

    “If we do not believe that this government can solve our problems, we will not have even brought it to the table in the first place. We have the conviction that this government can solve this problem. As a union leader, I cannot afford not to have the conviction that this government can solve our problems.”

    Appealing directly to President Bola Tinubu to intervene decisively in the health sector crisis, Suleiman said, “We believe this government is responsive and responsible. We believe that the President of the country, President Bola Tinubu, will hear our cry.

    “He will hear our call to him to come in and solve the welfare of not just resident doctors, but the entire health sector once and for all.”

    Explaining why the strike had become unavoidable, the NARD president said agreements reached with the Federal Government had repeatedly stalled, with new conditions introduced and some even reversed without consultation.

    “Now, today, what we are hearing is that the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC) has to do a job evaluation before CBA can continue, and that that job evaluation must last six months. This has not been communicated to us, but it has been communicated to Nigeria’s public freely today in the media. So it is like the goalpost keeps changing,” he said.

    He expressed doubt that the delays would end even if fresh conditions were met, saying, “I have the utmost confidence that even if the NSIWC finishes the job evaluation today, another reason will be concocted as to why CBA cannot continue.

    “So perhaps it is time to come clean, not just to Nigerians, but to come clean to all healthcare workers. I think if the Federal Government is not interested in this issue, they should make it clear they are not interested in this issue,” he said.

    He added that attempts to portray divisions among health workers were misleading, saying, “It is the responsibility of the government, and not doctors, to deliver health care services. We are just the tool in the hands of the Ministry of Health to deliver that.”

    Suleiman said the National Executive Council (NEC) of NARD had already taken a firm position, “The NEC categorically stated if these issues are not sorted out, we will down tools. So that is the message from the NEC,” he said.

    He noted that despite signing the MoU on November 27, and contrary to the Minister of State for Health Dr. Adekunle Salako’s claims, there had been no tangible progress.

    Salako, on a national television morning show, said the Tinubu administration approved a review of health workers’ professional allowances, raising annual government spending by about ₦90 billion, covering call duty, shift duty, non-clinical and rural posting allowances, following joint negotiations with all health worker groups.

    Salako added that NARD’s demands had dropped from 19 to nine, though some remaining issues are limited by civil service rules and approved schemes of service.

    Affirming that none of the 19 demands, later reduced to nine, has been implemented, Suleiman said, “I can confirm to you that the MoU signed has a 27th of November. Today is the 6th of January, 2026. Every issue is either at the point where the MoU was on the 27th of November, or we have even gone backwards.”

    On the claims by the Minister that ₦90 billion has been earmarked for the doctors’ claims in the 2026 budget, Suleiman challenged the government to demonstrate transparency.

    “Since they have said it is ₦90 billion, let them show us inside the budget where they put that ₦90 billion. So that healthcare workers will have peace of mind that our allowances were adjusted appropriately,” he said.

    Describing official statements as misleading, he added, “This is a gimmick. And I call it a gimmick so that Nigerians will look at us as being selfish.”

    On the issue of unpaid arrears and omissions, Suleiman disclosed that about 40 percent of resident doctors were affected. “There are failed payments, which means the names were on the initial list, but the money has not arrived.

    “The second problem is those that were supposed to be on the list at the initial that were omitted for one reason or another. And there is a lot in this category,” the NARD president noted.

    He stressed that funding remained the responsibility of the government.l, noting, “The availability of the funds is the responsibility of the government.

    “The money is still in the account. We have done our own by compiling failed payments and omissions, which is about 40 percent of our members. Now it is for the government to pay the remaining.

    On professional allowances, Suleiman rejected claims that resident doctors were demanding fresh salary increases, adding, “It is not a salary increment. It is an injustice. When they brought 18 months, we accepted it because we wanted progress.”

    Of concern, according to Suleiman, was the redeployment of five disengaged resident doctors of Federal Teaching Hospital Lokoja, instead of reinstating them with back pay as recommended by multiple investigative panels and reflected in the signed MoU.

    The association also criticized delays in transmitting compiled promotion arrears from 62 tertiary health institutions to the Budget Office and Ministry of Finance, stalling promised payments.

    Salary arrears across several federal hospitals remain unpaid, with backlogs ranging from four to over 20 months.

    Further grievances include non-issuance of Part One certificates by the National Postgraduate Medical College, non-recognition of West African College specialist certificates in Nigeria, and the abandonment of Committees meant to regulate excessive work hours and locum employment by the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare.

    Suleiman, however, reaffirmed the union’s readiness for dialogue but warned that patience had limits: “Whatever is responsible for the delay, if we sit down at the table, we can sort it out.

    “But since these delays are even coming despite having MoUs, we will not continue to wait indefinitely,” he said.

  • NARD: why we suspended strike

    NARD: why we suspended strike

    The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has said it suspended its indefinite nationwide strike after 29 days following measurable government action on key welfare and policy issues and out of concerns for the health outcomes of Nigerians.

    NARD President, Dr. Mohammad Usman Sulieman, who said this yesterday in Abuja while addressing reporters in the company of his executive members after the virtual National Executive Council (NEC) meeting on November 29, explained why the union suspended its strike.

    The NARD president said the decision was based on the progress made in arrears, allowances, manpower policies, and structural reforms affecting resident doctors nationwide.

    “The Federal Government, through IPPIS, has paid the arrears of the 25 and 35 per cent CONMESS review up to December 2023, except for isolated cases under reconciliation. Significant payments of the 2024 accoutrement allowance have also been made, with outstanding cases under review,” he said.

    Suleiman highlighted the resolution of the disengagement of five resident doctors at the Federal Teaching Hospital in Lokoja.

    “The committee set up by the Minister of State for Health has submitted its report, and the government has committed to full implementation within two weeks from November 27. How do you score an agreement like that? We have to wait for the implementation,” he added, noting the political will the government has demonstrated.

    The union leader explained that the Ministry of Health had issued advisories discouraging prolonged call duty hours, while a central task force comprising the ministry, the Chief Medical Director la (CMDs), the Medical and Dental Association of Nigeria (MDCAN), and NARD has been mandated to develop a comprehensive duty-hour policy within two months.

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    He stressed that the association was actively engaged in the one-to-one replacement policy to address manpower shortages and burnout, with feedback expected imminently from the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation.

    Suleiman announced renewed directives on promotion arrears, specialist allowances, corrected professional allowances, and the universal application of CONMESS across federal ministries.

    The NARD president said the association welcomed the government’s action to compile and transmit lists of outstanding salaries and allowances in several federal and state hospitals to the Budget Office and the Ministry of Finance for urgent payment.

    Though he acknowledging that some progress had been made, Suleiman expressed concern over unresolved local issues in some state tertiary hospitals.

    He said this necessitated the instruction to members in the affected centres to continue local industrial action until state governments demonstrated a genuine commitment to resolving their concerns.

    According to him, there is an ongoing work on collective bargaining agreements, infrastructure upgrades, and entry-level corrections for newly employed resident doctors.

    “The 25 and 35 per cent CONMESS arrears have been paid, but up to 40 per cent of our members are yet to receive theirs. The MoU provides that NARD will receive a Remita report from IPPIS to reconcile omissions and ensure full payment. We agreed on that and we are moving forward,” Suleiman said.

    The NARD president outlined the composition of the negotiation team, stressing the structured and comprehensive nature of the discussions.

    “The national negotiation team included the Ministers of Labour and Employment, Finance, and State for Health and Social Welfare. The National Salaries and Wages Commission, Office of the Accountant General, Office of the Head of Civil Service, Committee of CMDs, Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria, National Postgraduate Medical College, and Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) were all represented. This was not a rogue engagement,” he said.

    Reflecting on the broader impact of the strike, Dr Suleiman acknowledged the strain on doctors, including health risks and fatalities, saying, “Doctors have lost their lives during this strike due to comorbidities and accidents.

    “We must reflect on the treatment of doctors in Nigeria; when we heal the healer, access to healthcare for all improves,” he said.

    He said it was after exhaustive deliberations that the NEC resolved to suspend the strike for four weeks to allow government agencies to implement the renewed commitments. “We are giving the government a final window to implement the agreed demands. If these commitments are not fully met, the strike will resume immediately,” Suleiman warned

  • Time to shift ground

    Time to shift ground

    • NARD and the Federal Government must return to negotiation table

    Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) embarked on a nationwide strike from the midnight of November 1, 2025. This came after a series of warning strikes by the association, as a means of having its 19-point demand met by the Federal Government.

    ‎Like all trade unions, NARD feels that an all-out industrial action would force the government to accede to its demands, some of which predate the present government. But the government has no choice than to look into the demands, government being a continuum.

    ‎The strike is ongoing in about 91 health institutions nationwide.

    The demands range from salaries, working conditions, health infrastructure, benefits, COVID-19 allowance, systemic failures, Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS), and 2024 accoutrement allowances.

    ‎Others  are release of the 2025 Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF), with periodic reviews to account for inflation and other economic realities, health insurance for all medical and dental professionals, clearance of outstanding salary arrears, pension benefits, corrected allowances, specialist allowance, and full entitlement of house officers, among others.

    ‎Other sets of demands include the immediate reinstatement of five resident doctors whose appointments were unjustly terminated at the Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, in Kogi State, end to casualisation, promotion scales, reversal of appointment of non-medical personnel as honorary consultants (as they cite patient safety concerns) and immediate establishment of health management boards to improve governance and operational efficiency.

    ‎The strike is over a week old and casualties are being recorded across the nation. This is serious because life has no duplicate.

    ‎For a developing nation like Nigeria, the economic losses due to industrial actions can be huge and destabilising. We are concerned that the gains being made in the health sector by the present government could be lost if there is no immediate attempt to solve some of the complaints of the resident doctors, given their diverse functions in the health sector.

    ‎We regret that the strike was allowed to start in the first place, not because the doctors are sacred cows but because of the grave implications of any strike in the  health sector. Humans are a nation’s best resource and all efforts must be made to prevent avoidable deaths.

    Read Also: Nigeria and the challenging times

    ‎Health workers across the globe are valued because of their strategic importance. This is why nations across the world not only invest in training their own citizens but also poach qualified ones from elsewhere, especially developing countries.

    ‎In the case of Nigeria, it is a pathetic situation because despite the huge subsidies in training doctors, many of them travel out to other nations with better infrastructure and welfare after their subsidised training, living citizens with huge deficiencies. Nigeria has, like most developing nations in Sub-Saharan Africa, faced severe patient-to doctor ratio, falling short of United Nations benchmarks. This severely impacts our health and life expectancy.

    ‎In view of all of these, we recommend that government must apply all diplomatic and high skill negotiations to ensure that disagreements do not stretch from year to year, especially in the health sector.

    ‎Most of the doctors’ demands are just for basic needs that ordinarily ought to be a given. Health infrastructure provision is not just for the convenience of doctors, they are necessary to ease their work and give comfort to the sick.

    More often than not, the financial demand is so highlighted that it appears on the surface to be the flag. This is important but not the only reason.

    ‎Healthcare is not cheap, so government must invest hugely in the sector. If the saying, “a healthy nation is a wealthy nation” is anything to go by, then Nigeria must begin to pay greater attention to the health sector. This does not mean meeting all demands but opening communication points for productive negotiations with not just NARD but other healthcare workers’  associations.

    ‎While we believe that government often feels overwhelmed by sectoral demands, the fact also is that doctors and other Nigerians see politicians enjoy good welfare packages, with all sorts of allowances, including entertainment, wardrobe allowance, houses and very expensive cars paid for with the tax payers’ money. It becomes very illogical then to expect professionals

    ‎like doctors to be bogged down by unpaid salaries and allowances.

    We find it strange that the doctors are still being owed COVID-19 allowances five years post-COVID. Many countries through welfare encouraged the bravery of their healthcare workers at the time. Some of the healthcare workers paid the supreme price then.

    ‎We urge government to immediately reopen negotiations with NARD while solving the less challenging demands and making realistic and implementable policies that would be long lasting. For so long, successive governments have been accused of failed promises and lack of commitment to agreements. This can change with determination and commitment.

    In the social Nigerian parlance, “at all at all na im bad”. NARD would understand that the government cannot solve decades-long issues once.

    While we appreciate NARD’s grievances too, we urge the association to always hold fast through sheer commitment to their Hippocratic Oath as their commitment to the people who become the proverbial grass that suffers when two elephants fight. We urge the doctors to show compassion which is their main pillar as doctors.

    ‎Government on its part must show the doctors that they understand their demands and at least sort out the non-monetary issues that would ease their work. Spending decades studying and qualifying for practice must be rewarded.

    The medical profession might go the education route where most young people seeing how teachers are poorly remunerated often shy away from taking to teaching as a profession. We must put real value not just on doctors but all professions in the country.  

  • Politicians, resident doctors, equity

    Politicians, resident doctors, equity

    Politicians are now the unit of measure. Everything is measured against the politics of the day. The strike by the National Association of Residents Doctors, NARD, must be taken in the context of the long-standing political extravagance. It did not start today but it should end with this regime committed to good governance. A labourer is worthy of wages but wages are low. A Nigerian professional is as worthy of wages for hire as a politician, but politicians have taken everything. Certainly, the politician: professional salary difference is morally and nationally destructive.

    The plight of medical professionals today was preventable with implementation of existing agreements and negotiation. Up until 1980, there was no payment for call-duty. I was a past president of Association of Resident Doctors, University College Hospital, UCH, Ibadan and  past chairman of Nigerian Medical Association, NMA Oyo State and a resident doctor from 1975-1980. I became a consultant before call duty started. Sadly, 45 years later, the necessity for a strike before government politicians and authorised civil servants will pay legitimate paygrade wages and call duty to colleagues.  

    It is strange that arrears are owed to serving doctors at this time of serious weakness in health delivery and poor take-home salary and limited earning power and escalating cost of living. Some government workers fail their responsibility. Doctors are tired but not the only ones being short-changed and cheated. This has gone on for 50 years.

    This government has an opportunity to settle. The impression is that some in government and the civil service are incompetent or jealous of doctors. If so, they are welcome to train with them, learn the 1000 page books, endure the sleepless months, and take calls for 24-48-72 hours at a stretch before they can criticise or insult doctors seeking their rights. Politicians get excess of their rights for their ‘work’ (add generators, vehicles, police security) without a strike or fight even though we citizens vociferously object to their political financial profligacy.

    Sadly, Nigeria’s doctors must precipitate an emergency in the health sector by withdrawing their services today just to get the emotional and economic rights required to live to attend to tomorrow’s emergency patients. Tell me which senator or representative will work a day if owed what NARD doctors are owed?

    In addition, why has no administrative reformer not obverted and corrected the fact that doctors, like other federal workers forced, on employment, to work for three months before first salaries are paid? Can nobody solve this ‘traditional’ administrative aberration?  Politicians get paid sharp-sharp, immediately.  Why not pay all new federal government workers at first month’s end. Is it federal government civil servant irresponsibility, incompetence or just an ‘I-don’t care’ attitude?

    NARD doctors watch the news and see the politicians on stage. The mechanism for election is often compromised by party-driven electoral fraud shrouded from INEC, so the needed level playing field and objectivity of a hungry voter population are easily diluted by election day food and as the only ‘Dividends of Democracy’ delivered to the voter.

    Read Also: Strike: Why doctors cannot disrupt health services in Enugu – NMA

    The voting public are tired of National Assembly, NASS antics and are all sceptical and disappointed when the NASS leadership immediately suspends for six months any member who steps out of their line or talks too much. NASS sometimes acts like a secret society as it even appears to dislike members even talking about their salaries and perks.  It seems the majority also object to being outshone by those members who put more into opaque objectionable constituency projects. The entire political class needs to know it should stop being the very expensive and heavy burden, elephant on the backs of Nigerians.

    As we slowly recover from the hugely financially costly previous regime, Nigeria needs one House, preferably the House of Representatives. Nigeria needs rational politicians on a salary scale Grade 8-25 added on top of the current General Orders Salary Scale without the huge extra cost to Nigeria. In summary, Nigerian politicians need to take off their agbadas and babarigas and sink back down to the reality of life and living in Nigeria. Nigerian politicians need to cut their hyper-budgetary consumption. Nigerian politicians need to demonstrate exemplary cost-cutting in the forthcoming election cycle.

    For example, keeping the nomination forms at N25-100m for different grades up to president is what actually led to kidnappers demanding N100m as ransom. Nomination forms are the only tangible item that we citizens know in politics that must be paid for even by ‘Friends of the Nominee’. Unfortunately, that N25-100m multiplied by the hundreds of forms sold across all political parties, is a huge first line election financial burden. Where does this money come from? Does it come from the citizens budgeted coffers through ‘padding of first contract after taking office’ or ‘juicy posting to ‘lucrative ministries’ where funds can be extracted?

    Because of this, the citizen suffers ‘loss of governance funding’ with failure to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and other yardsticks of good governance like 24-hour electric  power, potable water, pothole free roads, well-equipped hospitals and especially Child and Teacher Friendly Schools etc.   To make it as a country seeking to become a nation and to be taken as a serious democratic political entity, Nigerian politicians must undertake to be seen to cut their coat, clean up their political excesses mess, cut costs of elections and cut politicians financial burden on governance for a cheaper cost: of dividends of democracy. Then ask or pressure government to pay NARD.