KMPDU, Gov’t in meeting over return-to-work formula as clinical officers take to streets
A day after the
court gave the government and the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and
Dentists Union (KMPDU) two days to come up with an agreeable return-to-work
formula, the two parties are now holed up in a meeting to beat Wednesday’s 2:30
pm deadline.
KMPDU, on the 55th
day of a strike, presented a separate document from what the government
presented before the Employment and Labour Relations Court, prompting the judge
to issue an order to have the two parties deposit a signed return-to-work
formula by Wednesday, failure to which the court will determine the
matter.
KMPDU and the
government through the Council of Governors (CoG) and the Ministry of Health
are in a meeting to try and come up with the formula as directed by the court.
“We have a return-to-work
formula that we think befits calling off the strike and the government has one
that they feel befits calling off the strike...so we want to go sit down and
analyse these documents and come up with a common return-to-work formula,”
KMPDU Secretary General Dr. Davji Atellah said.
The two meetings
are the latest attempt to solve the problem after several other similar engagements
ended in a stalemate.
This even as the
Kenya Union of Clinical Officers (KUCO) was on the streets on day 37 of their strike
on Tuesday.
The clinical
officers are demanding the implementation of their 2017 Collective Bargaining
Agreement (CBA).
For the last 37
days, KUCO members who work in government health facilities across the country
have been away from work citing discrimination by their employer.
“We are here to
stand with our brothers and sisters under UHC who are paid below what they
offer,” said KUCO Chair Peterson Wachira.
The union’s
Secretary General George Gibore added: “The devolution is a confusion to health
management and it is the reason why we continue to have strikes that have no
answer, the national government saying health is devolved while county governments
say they do not have money...so who has money to solve healthcare? Can we say
that we don’t have a government that can implement Article 43 of the
Constitution? Is it time then that Kenyans call for the dissolution of this government?”
The clinical
officers are demanding a better working environment and the implementation of
the 2017 CBA that increased their risk allowance from Ksh.3,000 to Ksh.15,000.
They accuse the
Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) of delays in the implementation of
the increment.
“We are also here
to ensure that our members have a comprehensive cover...we have our colleagues
who cannot afford the care they offer,” Wachira said.
“Tunataka serikali
iajiri maafisa tabibu kwa kandarasi za permanent and pensionable kama wale
wengine, ya pili tunataka career progression yetu ipitishwe,” Gibore noted.
The clinical
officers accuse county governments of intimidation and threats, adding that
they will continue with their strike until all their demands as stated in the
strike notice are addressed.
“The county
governments of Kisumu, Kisii, Embu, Kiambu Vihiga and any other that is willing
to join like Machakos that have stopped salaries of clinical officers and
continue offering show course letters to intimidate our workers, the clinical
officers are not going anywhere...use that energy to address our issues,”
Gibore stated.
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