The minister revealed that the Federal Government would look into the Yayale Ahmed’s Report on health sector.
He said that already the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation had been mandated to forward the white paper on the Report to the Council with a view to restore harmony in the health sector.
Ahmed’s Report was the report of the Presidential Committee of Experts on Inter-Professional Relationship in the Public Health Sector to end “unhealthy rivalries” among healthcare professionals.
The report was submitted to the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan.
Jonathan believed that the implementation of the committee’s accepted recommendations will help to end unhealthy rivalries and incessant strikes in the public health sector, which, he noted, had unfortunately created an atmosphere of uncertainty in the sector.
The former president said: “I had to set up the committee because I am very sad, and I know most Nigerians feel very sad that strikes and unhealthy rivalries among professionals in the health sector have adversely affected medical services.”
The Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr. Chris Ngige, said his ministry was fishing out industrial unions that did not have prescribed time limit for their elected officers.
Ngige said: “Council looked at another recommendation in terms of people who are permanently doing union activities.
“They are presidents of trade unions for life and they sit tight, criticise those who are trying to do third term or fourth term, while they themselves are sitting tight.
“It was agreed that my ministry should continue with our work in terms of fishing out the unions that don’t have constitutions that prescribed time limit for their elected officers.
“Such unions should be made to comply with the law, so that people can be elected, they serve out their term and other people will take their place.
“That is democracy in action.”
Ngige added that government was also considering enforcing the “no-work, no-pay” rule to contain strikes.