Striking doctors to hold emergency meeting Tuesday
The leadership of the Ghana Medical Association will hold an emergency General Meeting Tuesday.
The meeting, which has become necessary due to an ongoing impasse over their conditions of service, is to decide on the next line of action.
The emergency meeting is being held after a Sunday meeting with government officials to get them to go back to work, failed.
Government Sunday met with the leadership of the striking medical professionals hoping to reach an agreement over their conditions of service.
But the marathon meeting, which lasted all day was just another disappointing negotiating exercise.
The doctors familiar with Sunday’s arrangement once again rejected government’s offer, insisting it was unacceptable.
Government on the other hand rejected some of the conditions put forward by the doctors, leading to a deadlock situation that didn’t get better as the negotiations went on.
A not-so-okay twist to an already messy situation, it means the strike action by the doctors will continue nationwide.
Sunday’s meeting coincided with a Ministry of Health statement that claimed as false earlier media reports that suggested it had agreed to 50 percent of the demands being made by the doctors.
“As was stated in an earlier statement by the Minister for Employment and Labour Relations, the Public Services Joint Standing Negotiating Committee (PSJSNC) is already involved in a universal discussion of Category 2 & 3 allowances.
“The Ho Forum had agreed that the implementation of these allowances be deferred until after all public sector workers have been migrated on to the Single Spine Salary Structure.
“A number of demands contained in the GMA’s proposal fall under Category 2 and 3 and can therefore not be discussed between the Government and the GMA alone. Government wishes to restate that the negotiation of such allowances at the level of the PSJSNC is not negotiable. Any action to the contrary will seriously destroy the successful implementation of the Single Spine Pay Policy, which has and continues to have huge financial implications for the taxpayer.
“We have remained committed to the negotiation process with the GMA and Organized Labour with the view to ensuring a harmonious and productive working environment in Ghana. This commitment underpins the latest meeting with the Ghana Medical Association, which took place today, Sunday August 09, 2015.
“Government wishes to remind the GMA that the on-going strike is a violation of the Labour Act of 2003, (Act 651), which requires that parties to negotiation should not embark on lockout or strike.”