Tag: threatens

  • SOUTH AFRICA 2013 AFCON: FIFA clearance threatens Sidney Sam

    SOUTH AFRICA 2013 AFCON: FIFA clearance threatens Sidney Sam

    Sidney Sam’s hope of playing for Nigeria so soon may have to wait, supersport.com can report.

    Having featured for his country of birth, Germany, at Under 19, 20 and 21 levels, the Bayer Leverkusen man will have to be cleared by the world soccer governing body, FIFA to play for Nigeria.

    Supersport.com was made to understand that the 24-year-old will have to indicate in writing to the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) that he wants to agree to an international switch.

    The Nigerian FA will then make a formal request to FIFA with Sam’s letter as evidence.

    Nigeria head coach, Stephen Keshi said he will be glad to have the process started immediately.

    “I’m just the coach but I’m excited to have such a player commit to play for us. It will be good to start the process of completing his switch immediately.

    “It’s good the FA has gone through this same experience in the past (for Victor Moses and Shola Ameobi),” he said to supersport.com.

    Last year, Nigeria had to go through same process for Moses and Ameobi, who had both played for England youth teams, before they were cleared by Fifa last year.

    Sam is, however, eligible for Nigeria owing to FIFA’s removal of age limit for players who had already played for a nation at youth level which is stated in Article 18 of the world soccer body’s statute.

    It is now doubtful that the former Hamburger SV player will feature for Nigeria at next year’s Africa Cup of Nations.

  • Salary disparity threatens  workers in health sector

    Salary disparity threatens workers in health sector

    The health sector has been in the news for some time. But this time, it is about the disagreement between medical doctors and other health workers. The bone of contention is the demand by registered unions for the scrapping of the Consolidated Health Sector Salary Structure (CONHESS), which gives more cash to medical doctors than other workers in the sector. Medical doctors say the workers’demand is an invitation to anarchy, writes DUPE OLAOYE-OSINKOLU

     

    TROUBLE is brewing as paramedics are up in arms against the medical doctors, who they say, are being over-pampered by the government.

    Medical doctors on their part said unions of other health workers are inviting anarchy by seeking parity in salary with them. The other health workers on the other hand, are asking the government to stop paying the doctors Consolidated Health Sector Salary Structure (CONHESS). CONHESS gives medical doctors salaries that are much fatter than other professionals in the sector. Doctors however, disagreed with the demand, saying should the Government grant the request; they (doctors) would go on strike. But the paramedics said that doctors have been in control of the sector for too long and are carrying themselves as the lord of the sector, despising other health workers. The medical doctors said that they strive not just to be experts but consultants in their various fields, noting that paramedics parade themselves as if they (paramedics) can perform the roles of doctors.

    The battle line is therefore drawn between the pharmacists, nurses, laboratory scientists, other hospital workers on one side, and medical doctors on the other.

    The Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU), a united platform of five registered Trade Unions with legal backing to represent the interest of workers in the health industry is making efforts to ensuring that they achieve some landmark in the area of salary structure of health workers, by bridging the gap in the allowances of other health professionals and the doctors.

    JOHESU members include Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU), Medical and Health Workers’ Union of Nigeria, National Association of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives, Senior Staff Association of Universities Teaching Hospitals, Research Institutes and Associated Institutions and the Nigeria Union of Pharmacists, Medical Technologists and Professions Allied to Medicine.

    All the unions believe they have an axe to grind with the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), the umbrella body of medical doctors, which is the reason they came together to form a formidable body.

    The General Secretary of NASU, Comrade Peters Adeyemi said there is an inbuilt arrogance about doctors because they are being over-pampered by the government. He noted that no worker in the health sector can be regarded as least important since a doctor cannot do their jobs.

    “Right from the gate of the hospital, we have workers, whose duty the doctors cannot do, even issuing of cards, because no doctor can see a patient without a card. They can’t attend to patients on their own; they need nurses to administer drugs. Even the idea of only the doctors being made minister of health has to change. There are more qualified paramedics who can hold the position. They have arrogated so much authority to themselves, as if they can achieve anything without the contribution of other health workers. They always believe they are the only ones who are useful in the health sector,” he said.

    But the President of the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Dr Osahon Enabulele said doctors were not fighting the health workers, and that they (health workers) are the ones fighting doctors. He said that all the agenda of JOHESU was aimed at undermining the authority of the doctors.

    He said the problem in the sector was caused by the “perpetual greed of health workers to equate themselves with the doctors.”

    But the health workers are asking for the reconstitution of the boards of University Teaching Hospitals and other parastatals under the Ministry of Health with equitable representation by union and professional association.

     

    JOHESU’S Agitation

     

    In a statement signed by the Chairman and Secretary of JOHESU, Ayuba Wabba and George Ayua, JOHESU, the group said the NMA should “concentrate on its professional matters rather than dabbling into matters it is ignorant of.”

    The NMA President on his part said JOHESU’s agitation seeking equation with doctors will lead to anarchy. “We are saying everybody should be asking for what is realisable, the agitation must be based on anything besides an invitation to anarchy,” he stated.

    Mr Wabba said there is hierarchy in the health profession, and wondered why a laboratory scientist should be bent on being like a doctor. “They want to be consultants in the hospitals,” he said.

    He said if the government wants to concede to health workers demands,it also has to concede to so many other things, such as chief consultant and senior consultant that are no more in the structure. All these he said have to be restored.

    On the agitation for CONHESS, Enabulele said he started the battle for Consolidated Health Sector Salary Structure (CONHESS) as a way of stopping regular migration of doctors to other countries to seek greener pastures. “I introduced the concept of specialists’ allowance. You have to be appointed as a consultant to earn the specialist allowance. They also want it. They want to take final decision on patients. They can do anything elsewhere, but in the hospital setting, consultants are in charge. If there is a case of negligence, nobody thinks of nurses, they look for doctors.

    Earlier, this year, there was a strike called by health workers at the Federal Medical Centre, Abeokuta over alleged superiority tussle between nurses and doctors. The action grounded the hospital for about five days.

    A doctor allegedly slapped an assistant nursing officer in the heat of an argument, and failure of the hospital management to react when the matter was reported made the nurses association embark on strike. At a point, the loggerhead manifested when the issue of the health bill came up for assent. The health workers said President Jonathan should not sign it as it was, while the doctors urged Mr President to sign it.

     

    Contentious Bill

     

    The contentious provisions in the Health Bill according to the health workers include, National health system and regulation of health services; headship of the tertiary hospitals commission and the federal capital territory primary healthcare board. Others include status of the Armed Forces medical corps and membership of the National Council on Health; provision of essential drugs in primary care services; and developing primary care facilities in Nigeria. Also, establishment, composition, functions and tenure of national health research ethics committee; research of experimentation with human subjects; removal of tissue, blood products from living persons; removal, use or transplantation of tissue and administering of blood and blood products by medical practitioner or dentist. But medical doctors said that it was better for the bill to be assented to first by Mr President and amended later.

    The doctors said the health bill was the boldest step any government had taken in the last 10 years to address the challenges facing the healthcare delivery system in Nigeria, noting that those opposed to the bill are ignorant of the potential for transformation therein should the bill be faithfully implemented.

    The current agitation of the health workers include, non-skipping of Salary CONHESS 10 now before the National Industrial Court for adjudication, National Health Bill, Consultancy and Specialist Allowance, Call/Shift duty and other Professional Allowances, Presidential Committee Report on Harmony in the Health Sector namely: Promotion of Health Professionals from CONHESS 14-15, Request for implementation of 2008 Job Evaluation Committee Report, Need to review the retirement age, Re-constitution of Boards of management dissolved since September, 2011 and increase in retirement age from 60 to 65 years.

    Baring intervention by older health professionals and other stakeholders, this brewing enmity might assume an unhealthy crescendo in which professionals would be exchanging blows.

    Optometrist’s grouse

    Other areas of the health sector where grudges are being nursed against the medical doctors is the eye care. The optometrists are complaining bitterly that the government only recognises the ophthalmologists, even though they only perform eye surgery in cases of glaucoma or cataract, while other eye ailments are being taken care of by optometrists.

    Dr Tony Chiwike of Optic Ideal Eye Clinic, Lagos, said, other areas of health care professions is being neglected by the government.

    “ In the eye care profession, we have the optometrists, which is the first point of contact for any eye problem. Then we have the ophthalmologist, which is like a tertiary form for those who require surgery. The situation now is that the government only recognises the ophthalmologists, while the optometrists are being relegated to the background.

    “In some other advanced countries such as in the United States, and in Britain, all these professions have their distinct places. The ophthalmologists have their own functions, while the optometrists have their own duties. Any patient that has an eye problem comes to the optometrist, who attends to him or her, but if he or she needs a referral, maybe due to eye conditions like glaucoma or cataract, the optometrists refers such cases to ophthalmologists. If the patient needs eye glasses after the surgery, then the patient has to be referred back to optimist.

    “However in this country, ophthalmologists want to take care of everything concerning eye care. It is not done that way in other countries.”

    Chiwike added that Ophthalmologists have sent a proposal to the government on the issue to enlighten people on who to go to when they have eye problems and also to warn professionals not to encroach on other people’s duties. He blamed the government for not doing enough for optometrists in terms of recognition. He said only the medical doctors are being recognised, while other health professionals are not being accorded their rightful place. If they are accorded their rightful place, they would do more.

    Baring strong intervention by health professionals of old and other stakeholders, this brewing enmity might assume an unhealthy crescendo in which professionals would be exchanging blows, if these issues are not resolved.

  • Minimum wage:Labour threatens governors

    Minimum wage:Labour threatens governors

    GOVERNORS who are yet to implement the new national minimum wage of N18,000 may soon face the wrath of Labour.

    In an interview with The Nation, the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Deputy President Comrade Promise Adewusi, said it is engaging non-compliant states silently to make them see reason. But if they still refuse to implement, he warned, the Congress would take them up on it.

    He faulted the seeming refusal of some governors to implement the new national minimum wage, two years after the National Minimum Wage Act came into being.

    Lamenting the non-implementation, he said: “It is unfortunate that we can still be talking about the implementation of a mere N18,000 minimum wage almost two years after it became law. It shows the kalo kalo mentality of some of those who claim to govern us, when they spend more than five times  that amount to feed their dogs monthly. They claim that the states are not equally endowed. But when it comes to the payment of governors’ or legislators’ salaries or the craze for acquiring private jets, there is no disparity.

    “We have been engaging such states quietly to make them see reason unfortunately, the public will not see that now. It is only when there is a shut down that people will blame labour. Rather than face the purpose for which they claim they were elected, some of these unpatriotic governors are busy campaigning for transferring minimum wage issues from the exclusive to the concurrent legislative list to allow them the warped discretion of paying N3,000 as minimum wage and return the worker to second slavery. They neglect the fact that in all countries that have ratified the ILO Convention, it applies nationally and across board as a wage below which no worker can be expected to live a decent life under the ILO decent work agenda.”

    Adewusi also urged the ruling class to put in place a mechanism that could equitably redistribute the nation’s commonwealth, towards bridging the gap between the rich and the poor. He said governance ought to be about the welfare and well-being of the governed.

    “But in our own circumstance, it has become a programme for the emasculation of the governed (to which workers belong) by the governing class to massage the greed of this insensitive ruling class. It is the insatiable greed of the ruling class that continues to widen the gulf between the political class and the workers, including other ordinary Nigerians. Rather than put in place mechanism that can more equitably redistribute our commonwealth, the political class prefer to impoverish and enslave the people. The only way to halt this tragedy, hold the political class accountable and make life more meaningful for the toiling masses is to make Chapter two of our constitution, the ‘fundamental objectives and directive principles of state policy’ justice-able and therefore enforceable. This can be achieved by simply deleting section 6 (6) (c) of the 1999 constitution as amended, particularly now they claim to be amending the constitution.

    “By the time the politicians know that they will be paying through the nose for not abiding by the tenets of that chapter, they will sit up. Otherwise, holding the ruling class accountable will remain an illusion to be pursued, but may never be attained. Chapter two of our constitution has eloquently made the provision of such facilities the cardinal purpose of governance. But because this constitution is not of the people and like the devil, what this military-induced constitution has given with the right hand in chapter two, it takes away with the left hand through section 6 (6) (c). So delete that evil section and make chapter two justice-able, improve the independence of the judiciary and things will begin to fall in place. In the on going attempt to amend the 1999 constitution yet again without going through making a fresh constitution, the least that will be expected is the subjection of any legislative intervention to a national referendum to give it a semblance of legitimacy and validity deriving from the people.”

    He faulted the government on continued job loss in the country, blaming government policy.

    He said the claim that workers’ excessive strikes scare foreign investors was false.

    He cited the textile industry as an example, noting that it has the potential of employing thousands of Nigerians, but could not because of government’s policy.

    “Government gives a bail out loan to operators of the industry and almost simultaneously removes all restrictions on the importation of foreign textiles. And because of weak infrastructural base which can not support global competition, it becomes unprofitable for operators of the industry to manufacture locally.

    “They, therefore, resort to the more profitable channel of the importation of finished textile products, turning their factories into warehouses requiring not more than a handful of low level workers. Check it out, you will not see any manufacturer who relocated out of Nigeria giving strikes as excuse for the decision.”

    Adewusi even said the so called incessant strikes “were not manufactured by workers but forced on workers by insensitive corporate and political governance. And that strikes scare foreign investors is a fallacy, these foreign investors are coming from backgrounds where trade unions freedom and democracy are entrenched. The real scare off for foreign investors, are issues of insecurity, collapsing or collapsed infrastructure, lack of electricity, policy inconsistency and somersault in the polity.”

  • 13% derivation: Group threatens court action against Amaechi

    13% derivation: Group threatens court action against Amaechi

    The Association of Ogba/ Egbema /Ndoni, (ONELGA), communities, in Rivers State, has threatened to institute a legal action against the executive governor of Rivers State, Hon. Rotimi Amaechi, if he continues to play down on the issue of setting up Rivers State Oil Producing Commission in the state.

    The group made the threat in Port Harcourt recently, saying that the process for the action has already been set in motion, and that after exploring all necessary avenues, and he remained resolute to his resolve, they would take him to court.

    The president of the association, Dr. Innocent Masi, a onetime senatorial candidate in the state, noted that the directive for the establishment of the commission was given by the federal government in 1999, to ensure that the 13% derivation accruable to oil bearing communities would be properly managed and accounted for.

    The elder statesman however regretted that despite the federal government’s intervention, oil producing communities in the state has remained grossly marginalised.

     

  • Ogun PDP threatens to sue Police Commissioner for contempt

    The Ogun State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) yesterday threatened to sue the Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ikemefuna Okoye, for contempt of the court.

    In a statement in Abeokuta, the state capital, by its Publicity Secretary Waliu Oladipupo, PDP accused Okoye of “criminal complicity in aiding and abetting some hoodlums to seize its secretariat on IBB Boulevard, Kopabe Road, Abeokuta, last Wednesday”.

    The statement reads: “Up till now, the hoodlums, including some wanted criminals, are still at the party secretariat, having a free reign, shooting into the air intermittently and brandishing AK 47 rifles and other ammunition.

    “We shudder to think what could have informed the decision of the Commissioner, who is paid from our commonwealth to keep the peace, to look away in the face of obvious threat to peace, law and order in our dear state.

    “We are the management body for the state party, recognised by our predecessors, the party leadership at the national level, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). Our position has been further affirmed by several court judgments in Lagos, Abuja and Ilaro. Even the Assistant Commissioner of Police in-charge of the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) in his report to Okoye confirmed the Engr. Adebayo Dayo-led exco as the authentic leadership of the party. We availed CP Okoye all of these, yet he chose to play the ostrich. Does he want to return to the jungle where might is right?”

    PDP urged Okoye not to rubbish the rebranding efforts of the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Abubakar, and do the right thing.

  • Delta judge’s kidnap: Activist threatens legal action

    THE Igba of Warri, Chief Rita Lori Ogbebor, has restated her call for a probe into the kidnap of a Delta State Judge, Justice Marcel Okoh, on August 7.

    She threatened to seek legal action, if the probe does not begin after seven days.

    The activist said the ultimatum was necessary following failure by the authorities to respond to calls for an investigation into the incident.

    Justice Okoh was kidnapped on the day he was to rule on a land dispute between the Delta State government and the people of Okere, Warri.

    His kidnap led to the adjournment of the case to September 24. When Justice Okoh was freed, the case was reassigned to another judge, who adjourned it to October 8.

    On September 3, Chief Ogbebor petitioned the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Aloma Mukhtar; the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin; Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Muhammad Abubakar and President, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr. Okey Wali (SAN) on the matter.

    The Itsekiri leader argued that the “purported kidnap” was a “mere smokescreen” to rob her people of justice. She said the delayed judgment prompted the state government to continue building on the land.

    The petition reads: “I suspect that the purported kidnap is a smokescreen meant to pervert the course of justice and hereby call for a probe. If the judge was indeed kidnapped, what has the government done about it? It needs to be conclusively proven that the kidnap was not make-believe. How can a Judge be seized so cheaply, when politicians have, not only thugs, but soldiers and policemen to guard them? Will this situation not intimidate our judges?”

    Chief Ogbebor said although a top government official had apologised to the judiciary, but it was not enough to heal the wounds inflicted on the legal system.

    She said: “I reiterate the call for a probe because the court is the last hope of the common man and our judges should not be made to operate in an atmosphere of intimidation, harassment and constant threat. The oath of office they took is to dispense justice without fear or favour and be impartial umpires.”

    Chief Ogbebor expressed doubts over reports that Justice Okoh’s kidnappers had been killed by security agents. She said: “We need all the details to assure us that there is not more than meets the eye in the entire kidnap saga.

    “I believe the police and the judiciary can save Nigeria, if they do their work well. In contributing my quota to the equilibrium and cohesion of society, I have resolved to head to court unless a probe panel is set up to look into the circumstances of the judge’s kidnap.”