The minister maintained that if there were issues in the CBA over which NARD felt that their interest was not properly taken care of, they would have written to the ministry as well as come back for a conciliatory meeting.
“The alternative would not have been to embark on a strike. That is not industrial relations,” the minister said.
Ngige emphasized the importance of medical services which he said informed swift action by the government to reconvene a meeting few hours after the doctors embarked on the strike.
On his part, the NMA President, Dr. Mike Ozovehe Ogirima said, “We have listened to you and that is why we are here. We hope that the trust that was not there when MoU was signed will be restored at this meeting and once that trust is restored and evidences of implementations of the six-point demand are seen, I hope this will be the shortest strike by resident doctors.”
The meeting was still on as at the time of filing this report at the conference room of the Ministry of Labour and Employment.
Meanwhile, the Minister of Labour and Employment Dr Chris Ngige yesterday said that a crucial conciliatory meeting has been scheduled for today with the President and other executives of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).
The Minister said that the meeting would have in attendance officials of the Federal Ministry of Education led by the minister, Mallam Adamu Adamu and other stakeholders to find solutions to the lingering strike action declared by ASUU.
Source:MWN