Employment and Labour Relations Minister Haruna Iddrisu says
the threat by doctors to resign en masse if their conditions of service are not
reviewed by June ending is "unnecessary and uncalled for."
The Ghana Medical Association (GMA) gave the June 30
ultimatum shortly after a meeting with the Labour Ministry, Wednesday.
Deputy General Secretary of the GMA, Dr. Justice Yankson
says the absence of a collective bargaining agreement for the group was a
violation of the labour law.
“We have gotten to a point where we say enough is
enough", he said.
He said doctors, as a group of professionals in the country,
cannot continue to work under the current conditions if Government as an
employer refuses to provide appropriate conditions of service.
“We will resign and leave the health service to the Ministry
and its agencies to run the way they want to run it because we think this is a
big injustice”, he threatened.
The Association also expressed concern about why some newly
graduated doctors were still not employed at a time when the country needs more
doctors.
The doctors are wondering why Government would deny freezing
employment into the health and education sectors and yet have graduate doctors
sit at home.
But the sector minister told Joy FM's Super morning show host
Kojo Yankson on Thursday there will be no need for the doctors to resign.
"I have given them my assurance and that of Government
that for the first time in the history of the country the government is
committed to concluding and signing onto a condition of service for all health
service workers in Ghana," he said.
He wondered why the Association would be issuing such an
ultimatum just a day after he had met with them and more importantly at a time
its members are actually chairing a committee working on conditions of service
for all health workers.
He added that he has continuously advised the GMA and other
health workers against going on strike because they offer essential services
and the lives lost as a result of their strikes can never be brought back.
The Minister also described as "unacceptable" the
decision by the Ghana Health Service to keep doctors at home when their
services are required in hospitals across the country.
He said the GHS has been instructed to issue employment
letters to the affected doctors, adding, the practice in which the doctors are
paid seven months after they are employed has also been reviewed and that the
doctors will now be paid at least three months after they are employed.
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