Tag: sack

  • NULGE sues el-Rufai over mass sack

    NULGE sues el-Rufai over mass sack

    The Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) has dragged the Kaduna State government to the National Industrial Court, Abuja, to challenge the Kaduna State Local Government Councils’ order (Restructuring and Staffing Order) tagged: K.D.S.L.N. 2017.The order  sets the maximum staffing level for local governments and provides that the local governments, which have employees in excess of the maximum staffing level, be declared redundant.

    In the suit filed on behalf of NULGE by its counsel, Femi Aborisade, the union argued that the governor lacked the power to enact such law.

    Joined as defendants in the summon are the Kaduna State governor; Speaker, Kaduna State House of Assembly; the state Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice; his counterpart for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs; the state’s Local Government Service Commission and Head of Service, respectively.

    The union wants the court to declare the Kaduna State Local Government Councils (Restructuring and Staffing Order) tagged: K.D.S.L.N. 2017  unconstitutional

    Part of the reliefs sought by the union is “a declaration that the 1st Defendant, being a civilian governor of Kaduna State, under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as amended, lacks legislative powers and that the power of the 1st defendant are limited to maintaining the constitution and executing only the provisions of the law made by the state House of Assembly”.

    Meanwhile, NULGE has written to the Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, to declare a trade dispute between the union and the Kaduna State government.

    In the letter signed by Aborisade on behalf of the union, NULGE said 4, 410 local government employees across the 23 local government areas in Kaduna State are set to be declared redundant by the new order of the state .

    In a related event, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President, Comrade Ayuba Wabba in Kaduna, led a peaceful rally to protest the 22,000 primary school teachers’ sack in the state.

    The rally, which  made up of teachers from 23 local government areas of the state, other state chapters of Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) and Health workers union across the country, held in solidarity.

    Thousands of the protesters, led by NLC President, marched peacefully from the Labour House on Independence Way to the gate of the House of Assembly where they delivered their message amidst heavy security presence.

     

  • Kaduna teachers’ sack: Assembly raises probe panel

    The Kaduna State House of Assembly has raised a seven-man committee, led by Deputy Majority Leader Idris Abduwahab, to investigate teachers’ grievances and proffer ideas to improve education.

    The committee is to submit its report this week, he added.

    The Assembly lamented last week’s attack on its officers and the complex by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), in which property worth millions of naira were destroyed.

    The NLC, last week, protested alleged plans by the government to sack 21,780 primary school teachers, who failed a competency test. The protest was led by NLC’s President Ayuba Wabba.

    The Chairman, House Committee on Information and Home Affairs, Nuhu Goroh Shadalafia and Chairman, House Committee on Establishment Hassan Abdulkadir, were allegedly attacked.

    According to Shadalafia, the lawmakers were almost lynched by the protesters who broke the glass wall of the Assembly’s main office, pursued them and vandalised cars and other property.

    The lawmaker said none of them has received a petition or complaint from their constituency on the planned sack. He urged the teachers and workers to follow laid down rules on protest.

    “Nobody has been given three months’ notice; nobody has been stopped from going to school; nobody has been asked to pack out of their quarters. The House is taking note of the damaged facility, and would report to the government.

    “I have formally written a letter of complaint on what transpired in the leadership of the House and government would decide what to do,” Shadalafia stated.

  • ‘Govt helpless over casualisation, sack’

    The Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment has said it is helpless on issues, such as workers retrenchment, and casualisation by some companies in the country. It lamented that the development has become a great concern for the Federal Government.

    Speaking at a two-day Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) synergy programme in Akwa Ibom State, the Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr  Chris Ngige, said in addressing these issues, the Ministry will need the support of PENGASSAN and other unions in the country.

    “It is a pity that the issues of casualisation, retrenchment and other industrial disputes have been a major concern to us. In fact, I must tell you that we can only bark; we cannot bite. We need the supports of PENGASSAN and other unions to be able to tackle this menace,” he said.

    Represented at the forum by Akwa Ibom State Controller of the Ministry, Mrs Tonye Thom-Manuel, Ngige said the machinery of the settlement of labour conflict could be categorised into two.

    According to him, these include the internal machinery that is collectively negotiated between the management and the union and the external machinery that is statutory and enshrined in the constitution of the country and comprises the provision of the labour laws.

  • AGF urges court to dismiss suit  seeking Magu’s sack

    AGF urges court to dismiss suit seeking Magu’s sack

    Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar Malami (SAN) has urged a Federal High Court in Abuja to dismiss a suit by two lawyers seeking the sack of Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Ibrahim Magu.

    The AGF made the request in a notice of preliminary objection he filed for himself and on behalf of President Muhammadu Buhari against the suit.

    The plaintiffs – Ahmed Yusuf and Peter Asa – filed the suit on March 24, this year.

    They listed Magu, the AGF, the President, the Senate and the President of the Senate as defendants.

    The plaintiffs claimed to have been aggrieved by the appointment of Magu as the substantive Chairman of the EFCC by the President despite Senate’s refusal to confirm his appointment.

    They queried the competence of Magu’s continued occupation of the seat of EFCC Chairman, his nomination by the President having been rejected twice by the Senate

    The plaintiffs  primarily seeks an order restraining the President from further re-nominating or re-presenting Magu’s name to the Senate for confirmation, the name having earlier been rejected twice by the Senate.

    They also want a declaration that by the combined effect of the provisions of Section 2(3) of the EFCC Act and Order 131 of the Rules of the Senate, Magu or any other person cannot validly occupy the office of the Chairman of the EFCC in acting capacity.

    But in a notice of preliminary objection, the AGF argued that not only was the suit wrongly initiated by the plaintiff, they equally lacked the locus standi to file the suit.

    Malami argued that the plaintiffs did not have sufficient interest in the determination of the matter and have not shown that their civil rights were breached by the defendants.

  • NAICOM to sack insurance CEOs, brokers for non-payment of claims

    NAICOM to sack insurance CEOs, brokers for non-payment of claims

    The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) will remove the chief executive of any insurance and broking firm who fails to pay genuine claims, the Commissioner for Insurance, Mohammed Kari, has said.

    He gave the warning at the  Professional Forum of the Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria (CIIN) held in Abeokuta,  the Ogun State capital.

    Kari listed other issues for which CEOs could be sanctioned to include their companies’ inability or refusal to settle inter-company balances.

    These, according to him, have risen to an unacceptable level where the commission is required to withdraw the self-regulation option given operators to apply the big stick.

    He said the commission was alarmed by the incessant complaints of failure of insurance companies to settle genuine and discharged claims to policy holders.

    He said the commission had  received requests from claimants to apply the companies’ statutory deposit to settle discharged claims as stated by law, and that the process had started.

    Kari said: “And as a punitive measure, we have agreed to also publicise any company whose deposit is so applied and to have the chief executive of such company discharged.

    ‘’For all intermediaries who are brokers and insurance agents that hold back clients’ and companies’ money or collude to steal or corruptly operate, such actions being criminal, would be forwarded to the appropriate law enforcement agencies.’’

    He said the commission’s visit and meeting with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) would enable them to establish a joint taskforce to, among other things, ensure corruption is weeded out of the insurance sector.

    CIIN President Mrs. Funmi Babington-Ashaye, while speaking on the theme of the forum, “Solvency, stability and growth-exploring possibilities,”  chosen to draw attention to some of the critical challenges facing the industry, said they could evolve strategic solutions for the industry.

  • N720b subsidy arrears: PENGASSAN alerts on impending mass sack

    N720b subsidy arrears: PENGASSAN alerts on impending mass sack

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has called on the Federal Government to settle all debts allegedly owed oil marketers to avert job losses.

    The union said it believed that the payment would engender growth of not only the downstream sector, but all sectors in the industry and develop the economy.

    The senior staff trade union made the call against the backdrop of the threat by the marketers to embark on massive retrenchment of their  employees, if the government refuses settle the over N720 billion subsidy arrears.

    The debts, according to the marketers, are among the outstanding subsidy owed importers of petroleum products, accrued interest on loans from banks and exchange rate differentials, which made them halt importation of refined petroleum products, leaving only the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) as sole importers.

    A statement signed by the PENGASSAN National Public Relations Officer, Mr. Fortune Obi, urged the government to verify  the claims by the oil marketers and ensure quick settlement of genuine debts.

    “The government should try to separate the genuine claims by the importers from spurious ones and pay them accordingly because we will not like to be engulfed in the mistakes of the past where briefcase marketers milked the nation through dubious subsidy claims.

    “A situation where the workers in the industry bear the brunt of the government failure to honour its obligations as part of the importation deal will be unfair and unacceptable to our Association.

    This is against the President Muhammadu Buhari administration’s major policy of job creation,” Obi said.

    He said as much as PENGASSAN would support any move by the government to end subsidy regime and spurious claims by the marketers, it was also canvassing  the payment of debts that could hinder the downstream sector’s growth and attract investments into the sector.

    Obi noted that in the last five years, workforce in the downstream sector, especially the marketing sub sector, depleted by over 70 per cent, adding: “most of them were thrown into the already over-bloated labour market.”

  • Sack gale hits National Assembly

    Sack gale hits National Assembly

    Some lawmakers from the two major political parties have lost their seats in the National Assembly through the intervention of the judiciary. Most of them lost their seats due to flawed nomination. Though it has taken the courts about two years to resolve most of the petitions, the decisions have been hailed as a move in the right direction. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI and Eric Ikhilae report.

    Over time, Nigerians had been pessimistic about the role of the judiciary in interpreting the law and the constitution, particularly with regards to the resolution of electoral disputes. But, after some judgments perceived as conflicting in the aftermath of the 2015 general elections, the judiciary may have taken steps in recent times to redeem its image and restore the hope of many politicians in the integrity of the electoral process.

    This could be gleaned from the reaction of Nigerians to recent court judgments that sacked lawmakers from the two major political parties. The recent Supreme Court judgments that sacked two members of the National Assembly, Senator Sani Abubakar Danladi and Herman Hembe, and ordered them to repay within 90 days all salaries and allowances they received since they occupied positions they did not deserve have been hailed as landmark decisions that would go a long way in discouraging the do-or-die attitude of Nigerian politicians.

    The Supreme Court verdict was that Hembe, who represents Vandikwa/Konshisha constituency of Benue State, was not the valid candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). The court also ordered that Hembe be replaced with Dorathy Mato, who was declared the right winner of the APC primary. The biggest import of the ruling, in the view of observers, is that the court ordered Hembe to return all the salaries and allowances he received as lawmaker since he was sworn in 2015.

    In a similar fashion, Danladi, who was representing Taraba North Senatorial District, was sacked by the Supreme Court in June 2017, because he was not the rightful candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The court declared Shuaibu Lau as the senator representing Taraba North. It also ordered Danladi to refund all salaries and allowances he received since June 2015 within 90 days. Both Danladi and Lau are members of the PDP.

    Hembe and Danladi’s sack came two months after the Supreme Court sacked another member of the House of Representatives, Sopuluchukwu Ezeonwuka. The April 7 ruling by the apex court removed Ezeonwuka of the PDP from representing Orumba North/South of Anambra Federal Constituency. Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun gave the order in a judgment in an appeal filed against Ezeonwuka’s election by a member of the party, Ben Nwankwo.

    Dissatisfied with the February 20, 2015 judgment of the Federal High Court in Abuja and the decision of the Court Appeal to uphold it, Nwankwo had approached the apex court. At the end of the day, the court found that Nwankwo’s name was wrongly substituted with Ezeonwuka’s, after he obtained the nomination of the party to contest the National Assembly election. The judge also ordered that Ezeonwuka shall refund to the National Assembly all monies collected by him by way of salaries and allowances since he took the seat within 90 days. She also awarded a fine of N500, 000 in favour of the appellant against the first respondent.

    In February, the Court of Appeal sitting in Benin City sacked the lawmaker representing Ovia South West Constituency in the Edo State House of Assembly, Hon. Sunday Aghedo, and ordered that Godwin Adenomo to be sworn in immediately.

    Both Aghedo and Adenomo are members of the ruling APC. The latter had dragged the party and the committee that conducted the party primary to court for declaring the sacked lawmaker as the winner of the primary in 2014.

    Adenomo said he won the primary, but was denied the party’s ticket. An earlier High Court ruling had asked the APC to conduct a fresh primary for the position, but Adenomo rejected the ruling and headed for the appellate court.

    A few days after, a Federal High Court sitting in Uyo nullified the election of Senator Bassey Akpan, who represents Akwa Ibom Northeast in the National Assembly. The court faulted the primary that produced Akpan as flag bearer of the PDP and subsequent election that made him senator.

    He was asked by the court to refund all salaries and entitlements he has so far collected from the National Assembly. In the ruling, the trial judge, Justice Fatun Riman, asked the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to immediately issue the Certificate of Return to his challenger, Mr Bassey Etim.

    Akpan has however appealed the matter in court. He believes he was validly nominated and that the matter will run its full course up to the Supreme Court. He said: “The nomination form and expression of interest were tendered in court; the receipts were also tendered as well as the Certificate of Screening. We stood elections and by the Grace of God, we had the mandate of our party delegates. I won the primary by 366 votes at the Uyo Township Stadium; everything was done publicly.

    That has been the trend since the inauguration of the Eighth National Assembly over two years ago. Given the number of election tribunal judgments that reversed the electoral victories of many, the 2015 general elections is unique in the sense that the law courts, rather than the polling booths, have emerged as the new platform for seeking and obtaining electoral offices.

    With the growing number of lawmakers being sacked by the courts, observers believe the judicial arm of government is beginning to send a signal to politicians that they can no longer subvert the law and get away with it. In the view of Mr. Levi Obijiofor, a newspaper columnist, the message of the court in cases involving Danladi and Hembe, determined on June 23, 2017, is clear and unequivocal. He said: “The message from the court is that impunity can never supersede the rule of law. It is a message that clearly states that illegality can never overwhelm justice…

    “This new ruling will strike fear into the hearts of politicians. The key worry for all politicians is how they would find and refund thousands and possibly millions of naira they would have consumed in previous months and years. It is a tough call but it is the kind of tough judgment we need to get desperate and dishonourable politicians to play by the rules during election…

    “If we want to renovate the nation’s image at home and overseas, we must start by imposing severe punishment on politicians, who engage in electoral fraud, financial crimes and embezzlement of government property. This is the message the Supreme Court has conveyed by the heavy penalty it handed out to Herman Hembe and Sani Abubakar Danladi.”

    Obijiofor said the National Assembly, as an institution of the society, must undergo radical moral, psychological and physical reforms in order to serve the purpose for which it was established. He added: “Public image of previous sessions of the National Assembly suffered immeasurably as the image of the current members has been hammered in mainstream and online media. Everything suggests that the current National Assembly members appear determined to keep the flame of their tattered image burning for much longer.

    The increase in the success recorded in election disputes have been adduced to a number of reasons. One of such reasons is the extension of governorship and National Assembly election dispute to the Supreme Court.

    Before now, various divisions of the Court of Appeal usually hold varied and contradictory positions on similar issues of law. With the latest development, the Supreme Court has helped to ensure sanity and certainty. For instance, there are now standards for proving electoral fraud, non-compliance with electoral act and allegation of irregularities.

    Another reason for the perceived increase in the level of success is that lawyers now understand how to handle both pre and post-election disputes/petitions. The 2015 election was the fifth of such elections. As a result, many lawyers have learnt from their past mistakes and put the experience they have gathered over time into the petitions/cases they handled.

    Besides, observers say the chances of succeeding are higher when the petitions/cases bother on pre-election matters. Indeed, most of the successful disputes in the post-2015 general elections were in the category of pre-election cases. This is because, as the law stands today, it is easier to record or prove pre-election cases than those that that emanate after the election. This is owing to the existing encumbrances in the law.

    For instance, in election matters, the petitioner has only 180 days to prosecute the trial; 60 days each for appeal at the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court levels. The periods are considered insufficient to do thorough job. In pre-election matter, parties are not limited by time.

    Ordinarily, it is difficult to upturn an election result once it is declared by INEC. This is because the burden of prove in election matters rests on the petitioner. The position of the law is that there is the presumption that an election, which has produced a result, was conducted in substantial compliance with the provisions of the Electoral act.

    That is, once INEC declares the result of an election, the election enjoys the presumption of regularity. So, it is left for the person, who alleged the contrary, to prove otherwise. In other words, the burden of proving that an election was not conducted in substantial compliance with the provisions of the Electoral Act rests squarely with the petitioner.

    In election cases, it is always difficult to prove allegations of crimes like rigging, electoral violence, falsification of result sheets, undue influence and other forms of electoral malpractices. This accounts for why many petitioners find it difficult to succeed.

    For instance, the position of the law, in relation to the kind of evidence to be led to prove a case where election results/scores/votes is being challenged, is that such evidence should come from the officers present where the votes were counted. In the view of legal experts, where a petitioner fails to call such polling officers/agents as witnesses, the petition will be dismissed.

    Thus, in a situation where a petitioner challenges an election on grounds of non-compliance with the Electoral Act, he/she is required to call witnesses polling unit by polling unit and ward by ward to establish his claim of non-compliance. That is not all; the position of the law is that the petition must establish that the non-compliance was substantial and that it affected the outcome of the election.

    Where the petition is anchored on over-voting or ballot stuffing, a petitioner is required to produce the voters’ register, the ballot boxes containing the stuffed ballot papers and statement of results from the affected polling units complained about. An expert puts it this way: “A petitioner who alleges that an election did not hold is required to produce unmarked voters’ register. He is not to merely say so through witnesses’ testimonies.”

    Indeed, the INEC Chairman, Mahmoud Yakubu, indicated over a year ago that the 2015 general elections recorded the highest number of annulments since 2007, despite the fact that it was adjudged by local and international observers to be free, fair and the most credible, compared to other elections since the return to civil rule in 1999. The INEC boss, who was addressing Resident Electoral Commissioners (REC), said a total of 96 elections were annulled (more than the previous three elections combined) and in 81 of the annulments, the Appeal Court ordered for fresh elections, while in 15 cases INEC was directed to issue Certificates of Return to the rightful winners.

    Yakubu’s comment came against the background of the gale of judicial storm witnessed in Rivers State on Friday December 11, 2015, when the two senators and seven members of the House of Representatives elected on the platform of the PDP were sacked in one fell-swoop, through a judgment delivered late into the night. Of all federal lawmakers elected on the platform of the party, only Uche Nnam Obi of Ahoada West//Egbeama/Ndoni Federal Constituency was the only survivor. The judges upheld the verdict of the lower tribunal that Obi’s APC opponent, Lucky Odili, was not qualified to contest the election.

    The court had kicked off the series of judgments, 14 in all, including some cross appeals in the afternoon of the fateful day with the sack of two senators – Osinakachukwu Idoezu (Rivers Southwest) and John Olaka-Nwogo (Rivers Southeast), based on petitions by their APC challengers.

    A similar gale of judicial tsunami was also witnessed when early last year the Supreme Court sacked all members of the National Assembly elected on the platform of the PDP in Anambra State. The Supreme Court ruled that the list of nominated candidates in the 2015 general elections from the Ejike Oguebego-led executive of the party was the only one recognised by INEC. Uche Ekwunife (PDP Anambra Central) had earlier been sacked, alongside former Senate President David Mark (PDP Benue South), Mao Ohuabunwa (PDP Abia North) and Sekibo George (PDP Rivers East), who were removed over allegations that their elections were marred by irregularities. The apex court sacked the two remaining senators from Anambra State and 11 members of the House of Representatives representing the state.

    The senators are Andy Uba (Anambra South) and Stella Oduah (Anambra North). But, they insist that contrary to reports in the media that the Supreme Court judgment that re-affirmed Oguebego as the state PDP chairman does not affect their seats in the National Assembly, because the primary election where they emerged as senatorial candidates were conducted at the national level; not by the state executive council.

    Mark and Ohuabunwa were returned, following the rerun elections that took place in their constituencies.

    Most of the lawmakers lost their seats on issues bothering on pre-election matters, particularly over the issue of nomination, and they belong mostly to the PDP. This is owing to the impunity that characterised the party’s primaries across the nation prior to the 2015 general elections. From Abia to Anambra and elsewhere in the country, the pattern is the same. The same trend was also witnessed in the APC to a lesser extent.

    But it has taken the courts an average of two years to make final pronouncements on the rightful candidates. In most cases, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) observed all the primaries that are being nullified by the courts.

    Observers are questioning the essence of the constitutional requirement that the electoral body should observe party primaries, congresses and conventions, when by virtue of section 31 (1) of the Electoral Act 2010, as amended, it is divested of any say in the rightful candidate of the party.

    As a result, legal practitioners are advocating the involvement of INEC in the screening of candidates put forward by parties for election, since political parties have proved incorrigible in following due process in nominating their candidates, thereby constituting burden on the judiciary.

  • NUT endorses govt’s plan to sack uncertified teachers by 2018

    NUT endorses govt’s plan to sack uncertified teachers by 2018

    The Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) has endorsed the move by the Federal Government to sack those teaching in public schools without professional certificates by 2018.

    Its President, Michael Alogba Olukoya, who said this, noted that the professionalism drive of the teachers’ registration council is a right step in the right direction.

    He said the plan will make teachers to charge professional fees and correct wrong conception about the profession.

    The NUT president spoke while participating at the workshop organised by the Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria (TRCN) on Training the Trainers on the implementation of professional standards among Nigerian teachers.

    Giving kudos to the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration and Minister of EducationMallam Adamu Adamu and the TRCN boss, Prof. Segun Ajiboye on the drive to rid the profession of quacks, Olukoya noted that those not professionally qualified must be shown the way out.

    The NUT president noted that allowing quack teachers to teach children would be a great disservice to the future of Nigeria, adding that professionalism is the way to enhance standards.

    “It is going to bring about change in the attitudes and change in the previous conception. It is going to improve the quality of education in our country. I must give kudos to the government of Muhammadu Buhari and the minister of education, who have made many pronouncements, that in Nigeria if you are not professionally qualified,you shall be shown the way out.

    “There should be a different between men and boys. You cannot give what you don’t have and we are concerned about the standards. In teaching, there should be no room for quacks because quacks in the classroom will damage the children and leave them more confused than they were before.

    “It is the responsibility of us in the NUT to ensure that this does not happen. This new development, sincerely, we teachers in Nigeria welcome it and we are going to partner with the TRCN to move the state of teaching profession to state of Eldorado,”he stated.

    TRCN Registrar/Chief Executive Prof. Olusegun Ajiboye said the implementation of the policy will begin in 2018, warning those yet to have professional certificate to take the opportunity of writing professional examination in October 2017.

    Ajiboye added that it was important to remove “cheaters” from “teachers”.

    According to him, those teaching in public and private schools must be registered to be professional teachers.

    The TRCN boss added that the Ministry of Education is working hard to ensure that teachers’ welfare are improved within the lifespan of the Buhari administration.

  • Fatai Amoo Faces Sack

    Fatai Amoo Faces Sack

    The management of Shooting Stars Sports Club (3SC), has given an ultimatum to the technical crew of the team to immediately find a way out of the relegation zone in the Nigerian Professional League or be ready to face sack.

    The Executive Chairman of the Club, Mr. Gbolagade Busari gave this stern warning on Monday at an emergency management meeting to evaluate the position of the club at rock bottom of the league table.

    Busari disclosed that the Technical Adviser of the team, Mr Fatai Amoo, was specifically reminded that his position, as the head of the crew will be evaluated on match-to-match basis and the management will not hesitate to wield the big axe.
    The ultimatum given to the technical crew start from their next game against Abubakar Bukola Saraki (ABS) FC on Sunday in Ibadan.

    “The team has a crop of young and promising players that could excel in the Nigerian League and it is the duty of the technical crew to mould them into a successful side,” Busari said. The Chairman reiterated that the management will not tolerate any form of excuses on the part of the technical crew, urging that all efforts should be harnessed to see that the team survives the relegation battles.

    In his own submission, the State Commissioner for Youth and Sports, Mr. Yomi Oke promised that the government will redouble its efforts in supporting the team in its bid to bring back the glory of Shooting Stars, adding that the teeming supporters, who are not happy with the team, will soon have smiles on their faces.

  • Medical union dismisses sack threat

    Medical union dismisses sack threat

    •We’re not fighting NMA, says govt

    The Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) in Kogi State has told its members to disregard the government’s threat to sack whoever participates in the ongoing strike.

    A statement by its Chairman, Dr. Tijani Godwin, said the strike would continue until their demands are met.

    It warned members against signing any register as stipulated in the government’s circular, saying anyone who disobeyed the “decision of the congress would blame him/herself because the congress’s decision is binding on all”.

    The statement reads: “Information reaching us shows that the Acting Head of Service, Mrs. Kehinde Lawal, has directed the Chief Medical Directors of HMB, KSSH and KSUTH, to open a register for the striking doctors as from today, to begin the No Work No Pay Policy.

    “We are also threatened with sack, if we failed to suspend the strike and resume duty. But NMA urges its members to disregard the threats and be resolute in this struggle. No doctor should sign any register.

    “Any member who disobeys the decision of the congress will have him or herself to blame because the decision is binding on all members.

    “Remember, injury to one is injury to all. When ASUU and other category of workers were on strike, they were never threatened, rather they were pardoned. Why NMA? Let’s join hands to save our profession today”.

    But the government has said it is not at war with the doctors, promising to work towards an amicable solution on the matter.

    It, however, reiterated its earlier position, calling on the doctors to resume work, failing which the no-work-no-pay rule will apply.

    Governor Yahaya Bello’s Director-General on Media and Strategy, Kingsley Fanwo, in a statement yesterday, said the government would ensure a peaceful industrial relation between it and the health workers.

    Fanwo said the government made its position known through a circular by the Acting Head of Service, Mrs. K. Lawal.

    The statement reads: “The medical profession must not lose its humanitarian heart. Healthcare issues are about life, and the government will never trivialise issues affecting the health sector.

    “Rather than abandon patients on the sick bed, NMA should choose the path of negotiations to resolve the issues they have raised about the screening exercise, and the effects on its members. We are prepared to care for those who care for the sick.

    “Doctors’ welfare is critical to achieving our goals in healthcare delivery. Strike must be seen as a last resort, when all peaceful avenues are not yielding fruits. The governor is prepared to listen to all grievances and give truthful positions. This quality should be explored by patriotic unionists who dream of a better and a more prosperous Kogi State. It will be unfair to the people to hide behind the transparent curtains of political interest to subvert their interest and welfare

    “The government’s position on the strike remains the same. Government is prepared to listen and negotiate, but the public will tell us if we can use their taxes to pay those who will leave the sick unattended.

    “We want to know the justice and fairness in paying people who do not work. We want to continue to pay our doctors, and that is why we are begging them to go back to work and give government the benefit of the doubt to address their grievances.”