The
University Graduates of Nursing Science Association (UGONSA) has said that the
Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) seems not to have learnt from its past
mistakes.
In
a statement, Thursday, by its National President, Chief (Hon.) Solomon E.O.
Egwuenu and National Secretary, Nurse Goodluck I. Nshi, the association said
that JOHESU had not learnt from its past irresponsible demeanor that provoked
UGONSA into calling off the solidarity of its members during its previous
industrial actions.
The
statement read: “The purported list of JOHESU’s demands that itemized enhanced
entry point placements for Medical Laboratory Scientists and Radiographers, to
the exclusion of the graduate nurses, that suffer a similar fate, shows that
JOHESU is yet to learn from its past mistakes.
“We
wonder why JOHESU thinks it will enlist overwhelming solidarity from all
segments of nurses when it displays a divisive and parochial tactic of using
nurses' numerical strength to selectively pursue a narrow agenda that will only
favour other professions at the expense of the nursing profession.
“Everybody
in JOHESU knows that graduate nurses are not only battling the issue of
enhanced entry point placement on CONHESS 08 for internship and CONHESS 09
post-NYSC, at the moment, but also the impunity of CMDs in violating extant
circulars as a good number of them still appoint graduate nurses on CONHESS 07
against the currently prescribed CONHESS 08 post-NYSC.
“We
expected that, having shot itself in the foot in the past, JOHESU would have by
now amended its ways to be all-inclusive in the handling of affairs of all the
professions under its umbrella. But this seems to not be the case.
“It
is on record that JOHESU never supported our struggle for internship yet we
successfully achieved it on our own. If they have also decided not to identify
with us in our current struggle for proper placement there is no cause for
alarm because, like the internship, proper placement is not beyond our capacity
to achieve. However, they should not dream of nurses’ solidarity and support
because we shall mobilize nurses to jettison whatever flowery antics they may
use as bait to lure them into strikes that will not benefit their profession.
After all reciprocity is the dynamics of diplomacy.
“We
want to put it on record that graduate nurses have no problem with the
coalition, but have every problem with the irrationality of perennially having
their concerns excluded from what JOHESU presents to the government.
“While the weight advantage of nurses is being
used to get the attention of the government, one would expect that nurses'
demands would always be on the front burner of JOHESU’s demands. But the situation
is so precarious that nurses' specific demands, especially those that have
direct bearing with graduate nurses, are not accommodated at all; not even at
the bottom of its list of demands!
“We believe that we are doubly armoured when
we fight together; we believe in teamwork and have strong faith in team spirit
and solidarity. But when issues of concern to nurses are treated with levity
and disdain, the latitude of elaboration of our solidarity is stifled as
solidarity can only be sufficiently elaborated under an atmosphere of equity,
justice and inclusiveness.
For
the umpteenth time, we call on JOHESU to be reasonable and realize that nurses
are inalienable stakeholders in its project. As much as we do not wish that
what happened in the past repeats itself, we shall have no other alternative
than to withhold our solidarity and fight our battles alone if our specific
problems as enumerated are overlooked and trivialized as usual- the statement
said.
I do not blame JOHESU totally on their repeated omission of Graduates Nurses/Nurses' interest in the lists of their demands, rather I blame it on our irresponsive Leaders that are representing us in JOHESU.
ReplyDeleteIf JOHESU does not go back and make her demands to accommodate the interest of all graduate nurses, I am ready to work the way I worked before and God of justice will see us through again.
ReplyDeleteThe whole thing resulted from the way NANNM Handle the the affairs of graduate nurses. If it doesn't change,then nothing meaningful will come out. From the look of things, our mother association never tabled graduate nurses demands before johesu,and hence johesu action.
ReplyDeleteI suggest that if JOHESU refuses to include our need or problem then we write to the national assembly as a matter of public interest which could tuat the activities of the health sector generally
ReplyDelete