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Japa: FG approves contract appointments for retired healthcare workers

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The Federal Government has approved the appointment of doctors, nurses, and other clinical healthcare workers as contract staff after attaining their compulsory retirement age or years in service.

This is part of efforts to mitigate the mass exodus of health workers to developed countries, which has led to an acute shortage of health professionals in the nation’s health sector.

The approval was contained in a circular dated 5 October and issued by the Federal Ministry of Health.

In the circular, the government directed all chief executive officers of agencies, chief medical directors, medical directors, and heads of regulatory bodies and schools to ensure strict compliance with a previous circular issued by the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation to all staff within their respective institutions.

This development follows a prior circular dated 30 August from the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (OHCSF).

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The circular, titled ‘Re: Review of retirement age to 65 and 70 years for health professionals and medical/dental consultants,’ with reference number HCSF/SPSO/ODD/CND/100/S./145, was addressed to the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Health.

The circular, signed by Olufemi Oloruntoba, the Permanent Secretary of the Service Policies and Strategies Office, on behalf of the HCSF, expressed the rejection of the proposed increase in retirement age for medical and dental consultants and other health professionals.

It cited several reasons for the rejection including the fact that healthcare professionals were leaving the country not due to their retirement age but primarily because of financial considerations and unfavourable working conditions.

“Some state government had already increased the retirement age of medical doctors and other health workers and this has not addressed the spate of brain drain,” it said.

The circular expressed dissatisfaction with the work ethic of healthcare workers, despite the government’s efforts to encourage them.

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However, in a significant move, the circular also approved that clinical health workers who have reached their compulsory retirement age or years of service may be offered contract appointments.

These contract appointments would be on the same salary scale level that they retired on, provided the healthcare worker desires and deserves it.

The circular calls on the government to engage with relevant bodies, such as the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria and the Nigerian Medical Association, to secure a commitment from medical doctors.

It also calls for the establishment of an effective performance management system within the public service to enhance the work ethics of medical officers, consultants, and doctors.

“To address the observed dissatisfaction with the attitude of health workers to work, there is a need to institutionalise an effective performance management system in the public service in order to improve the work ethics of the medical officers and consultant, and medical doctors should show more patriotism in the discharge of their duties and avoid holding the system to ransom,” the circular also said.

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The circular emphasised the importance of medical professionals showing greater patriotism in the discharge of their duties and refraining from actions that could disrupt the healthcare system.

Nigeria’s health sector is currently grappling with severe shortage of skilled personnel, resulting from the mass departure of healthcare professionals.

A 2022 UK immigration report showed that 13,609 Nigerian healthcare workers (including doctors) were granted working visas in the past year, making the country second only to the 42,966 from India.

As of October 2022, the Nigeria Medical Association disclosed that only 24,000 licensed medical doctors were available in the country, lamenting that only one doctor is available to treat 30,000 patients in some southern states, while in the north, it is one doctor to 45,000 patients.

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Politics

How I outsmarted APC NWC to deliver presidency to south-west – Omisore

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Iyiola Omisore, immediate-past national secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), says he worked for President Bola Tinubu to become the party’s presidential candidate.

 

In the build-up to the party’s presidential primary in June 2022, Abdullahi Adamu, former APC national chairman, supported Ahmad Lawan, a former president of the senate.

 

However, Lawan lost out to Tinubu at the primary election.

 

Speaking during a programme on Channels Television, Omisore said he outsmarted all those who were trying to have a presidential candidate from their zones.

 

“In politics, everybody has their mindsets. We came from different (geopolitical) zones to the NWC that time, representing different interests,” Omisore said.

 

“I was the most senior member of the party in the south-west and my mandate was to deliver the south-west for the presidency.

 

“Somebody from south-south too, his own mandate was to deliver south for the presidency. I want to assume so.

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“So, my own way was to get to my destination which I have gotten to today. The way and manner I did my journey is between me and God.

 

“I can’t castigate anybody who tried to be smart but if you want to be smart and I outsmarted you, to God be the glory. But the point is that my mission was to deliver the south-west presidency which we are today.”

 

Omisore said though different people in the national working committee (NWC) had candidates they wanted to become flag bearer, they were still able to present a democratic convention.

 

“We voted. Everybody had a choice and it was transparent,” he said.

 

“The moment there is a transparent primary, there won’t be noise; it is only when people feel cheated that they go to court.”

 

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Ayo Banjo dies at 90

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Ladipo Ayodeji Banjo, a former vice-chancellor of the University of Ibadan (UI), is dead.

Sources close to his family confirmed that the academic passed away on Friday morning.

 

He was born on May 2, 1934, in Oyo state. He attended Igbobi College in Lagos between 1947 and 1952.

 

Banjo began his career as a lecturer at UI’s English department in 1966. The same year, he won the American State Department scholarship award for an MA in linguistics at the University of California in the US.

 

The academic later obtained a doctorate degree from UI in 1969.

 

He was appointed associate professor in 1973 and became a full professor in 1975.

 

The academic was appointed vice-chancellor of the University of Ibadan in 1984, a position he held till 1991.

 

During this period, he was the chairman of the committee of vice-chancellors for Nigerian universities.

 

Banjo was a visiting professor for one year at the University of West Indies at Cave Hill, Northern Ireland.

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He was also a visiting fellow at the University of Cambridge, England, between 1993 and 1994.

 

The professor was appointed the pro-chancellor of the University of Port Harcourt between 2000 and 2004.

 

After his tenure, he was appointed pro-chancellor of the University of Ilorin for two years (2005 to 2007).

 

He also served as the incumbent pro-chancellor of Ajayi Crowther University.

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Judge who stopped Sanusi’s reinstatement issued order from US – Kano gov

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Kano State Governor, Abba Yusuf, on Friday, promised to report Justice Mohammed Liman of a Federal High Court for allegedly giving an order stopping the reinstatement of Sanusi Lamido as the 16th Emir of Kano from the United States.

 

He said he would report the judge to the Nigeria Governors’ Forum.

 

Justice Liman had granted the order in an application filed by the Sarkin Dawaki Babba of the Kano Emirate, Aminu Babba Dan Agundi, to stop the Kano State Government from enforcing the Kano State Emirate Council Repeal Law which dethroned all five Emirs in the state.

 

However, Yusuf, while reacting to the court order after issuing the reinstatement letter to Lamido at Africa House, Kano State Government House, said, “The person that issued the court order was in America but he is ordering us to stop what we are doing. This issue of abuse I must present it before the Governor’s Forum so that we can tackle it accordingly.

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“We are agents of following due process, that’s why we did what we did openly before everybody. Those that are meant to maintain that rule of law remains must follow that also.”

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