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President Lacks Powers To Sack Resident Doctors, Says SAN - Politics - Nairaland

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President Lacks Powers To Sack Resident Doctors, Says SAN by phantom(m): 8:32pm On Aug 26, 2014
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Sebastine Hon, has declared the sack of 16,000 resident doctors by President Goodluck Jonathan as both unconstitutional and unlawful. “It is indeed null and void and of no effect whatsoever,” Hon. said.

He said that Section 40 of the 1999 Constitution as amended, guaranteed the right of “every person” (in this case, including members of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) to “assemble freely and associate with other persons, and in particular” to “belong to any political party, trade union,” etc, “for the protection of his interests.”
“The affected medical practitioners, therefore, committed no wrong when they, coming under the umbrella of the NMA, embarked on a strike for the protection of their interests,” he added.

He also explained that the right to embark on a strike was a common law right, recognised by Nigerian law.
“It was Lord Wright who stated in Crofter Harris Tweed & Co. vs. Veitch (1942) 1 All ER 142 at 158 that ‘Where the rights of labour are concerned, the rights of the employers are conditioned by the rights of men to give or withhold their services. The right of the workman to strike is an essential element in the principle of collective bargaining. It is, in other words, an essential element not only of the union’s bargaining process itself, it is also a necessary sanction for enforcing agreed rules,”

He stated that case law in Nigeria had also legitimised strike.
According to him, the Court of Appeal of Nigeria accepted that embarking on a strike was acceptable in law, when it held in Union Bank of Nigeria Ltd. vs. Edet (1993) 4 NWLR (Pt. 287) 288, that when negotiations between an employer and his employees fail, resort could lead to a strike by such employees, for the purpose of pressing home their demands.

He noted that even though the Trade Disputes (Essential Services) Act, Cap. T9, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, penalised strike by persons rendering essential services, including in this case, members of the NMA, he however said that this legislation did not imbue the president with any modicum of power to sack any person who had acted in breach of the Act.

He said: “Indeed, the Minister of Labour, upon being given notice of an intended strike; or even as the strike action is ongoing, ought to have taken the following proactive steps stipulated in section 5 of the Act, namely:
“5. Where any trade dispute exists or is apprehended and it appears to the Minister that the dispute is one to which persons employed in any essential service are a party or might become a party, the minister may, whether or not a report in respect of the dispute has been received by him under section 6 of the Trade Disputes Act, refer the dispute for settlement to the Industrial Arbitration Panel established under section 9 of the Trade Disputes Act....”

He said there was nowhere in the entire Trade Disputes (Essential Services) Act where the President of Nigeria or the office of the Secretary to the Federal Government was mentioned.

“There is also nowhere in the entire Act where it is stipulated that when any person rendering essential service embarks on a strike action, he should be sacked from office,” he added.

He also contended that all members of the NMA were resident doctors, whose employments were regulated and indeed protected by the provisions of the University Teaching Hospitals (Reconstitution of Boards, etc) Act, Cap. U15, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

He said: “It is settled law without any dispute that the employment of such persons cannot be terminated save by due process established under the Act, the most essential of which is, as stipulated under section 9 of the Act.
“This section is to the effect that the affected medical doctors be issued written queries and that complaints against them be tried by independent administrative committees.

“Even when such committees find them culpable, the only competent body to terminate the employment of members of the NMA are the respective Hospital Management Boards and not the Presidency.”
He cited section 9 of the University Teaching Hospitals (Reconstitution of Boards, etc) Act, Cap. U15, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004 and the case of University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital Management Board vs. Nnoli (1994) 10 SCNJ 71.

Hon said that nowhere in this Act was the President assigned the duty of terminating the employment of any medical doctor employed in any of the University Teaching Hospitals.
He declared the pronouncement by the presidency sacking those medical doctors as unconstitutional, null and void.

“And the law is well settled that any act or action that is null and void is deemed not to have existed at all; hence should be ignored. NMA members can, therefore, ignore such purported mass sack; and if their salaries and emoluments are withheld or if they are denied ingress into and egress out of their respective hospitals, they can enforce those rights in court with 100 per cent probability of success,” he added.
He, however, appealed to the NMA members to accede to reasonable offers from the government and end the strike action soonest, for humane reasons.


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Re: President Lacks Powers To Sack Resident Doctors, Says SAN by warrior01: 9:15pm On Aug 26, 2014
Lol.... Stupid doctors that woke up one day and decided to challenge their Chi. As per Gej having the power to sack his employees, I think you people should learn from Sanusi he knows better now.

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