The Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu,
on Monday, in Abuja expressed concern on the nation’s state of affairs, saying
only revolution would address the imbalances in the system.
Chukwu, who made the suggestion during the
inauguration of councils and boards of health professional’s regulatory bodies,
was reacting to fresh threats by some unions in the health sector to go on
another strike.
He said, “If you see the kind of letters I
receive from people who should be respected health professionals, you will weep
for this country. The health sector is losing its respect. I repeat the health
sector has lost its respect; it is not only losing.
“Right now, I have on my table three threats
(among groups in the health sector) to proceed on strike. One threat is to
proceed on November 28. Another one is to start on December 13. For me, they
can go ahead. If you are talking, people should stop sending these threats to me
for goodness sake.
“Look at ASUU; we’ve not had any school; for how
many months? Four months! Maybe, that is what Nigeria needs; we need a revolution.
For me, I like it. Let’s close everything; let’s start afresh. It may be better
for this country. If all these people go to the private sector they run back
because they won’t get half of what government is paying.”
The minister defended the Federal Government,
saying it was only in Nigeria that “we have the abnormality where government is
paying better than the private sector.”
“It shouldn’t be so. The private sector ought to
pay better. When I graduated as a doctor, the private sector was paying two to
four times what we earned in government. But that has changed.”
He told the health unions to decide whether they
preferred the private sector “where every second of the 24 hours will count or
where from time to time, you have some casual leave, if they will allow you to
go.”
Chukwu also said, “You can’t have it both ways;
you cannot. But today, the government is paying two times what obtains in the
private sector. Something is wrong somewhere. I don’t know; but something is
wrong. We need to tell ourselves the truth.
“So, for me, I think we need to go back to the
drawing board, all of us. Of course, we need to look at the curriculum; to look
at the training of our products. We need to look at our curriculum. There
is the need to maintain currency of the different training curricula.”
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