JUTH workers begin sit-at-work strike
Workers of the Jos University Teaching
Hospital on Monday embarked on a sit-at-work strike to protest the non
payment of their June salaries.
A correspondent, who visited the
hospital, reported that the workers came to their working place but
merely sat down and did not resume duties.
The workers signed the attendance register at the hospital but were not attending to patients.
Mr Samfi Kesuwo, Secretary, Joint Health
Sector Union (JOHESU), JUTH chapter, said that they embarked on the
strike on Friday to press home their demand for payment of the June
salaries.
“We just come to work and sit down doing nothing. We wonder why only 394 members of staff were paid, out of the 2094 workers.
“Although we are yet to be addressed by
management over why we were not paid, rumours have it that it was a
system failure from IPPIS.
“But it is amazing to us that the system
recognised only Heads of Departments and the Chief Medical Director
(CMD)’s loyalists and paid them.
“The burning question is, how did the system recognised the CMD’s loyalists and the heads of the departments?’’
He said that the workers would continue with the strike until their salaries were paid.
Reacting to the development, the CMD,
Prof Edmund Banwat, attributed the non-payment of salaries of most of
the workers to “an error from the IPPIS’’.
“An error occurred on the IPPIS platform in the course of the payment.
“The management of the IPPIS admitted
that error and promised to rectify it immediately after the Sallah
break, but the break was extended, leaving them with only Friday to
carry out the rectification.
“Unfortunately, we woke up that Friday to find the gates and offices locked by the workers over the non-payment of salaries.
“IPPIS is in Abuja, but the workers are venting their anger on us here.
“There is nothing we can do outside pleading with the workers to just wait for IPPIS to rectify the issues,’’ he said.
Banwat said he just confirmed that the issues had been resolved while payment would soon begin.
“We expect many workers to get their
alerts this afternoon. I already have that assurance from the IPPIS and
the Central Bank of Nigeria,’’ he said.
Banwat dismissed the allegation that he selected those to be paid and those to be left out.
“We do not control IPPIS pay platform,
it is not an internal issue. It was just an error which IPPIS has
admitted and already correcting,’’ he said.
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