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Africa News of Monday, 7 September 2020

Source: bbc.com

Doctors in Nigeria's state-run hospitals go on strike

The association of resident doctors said it had lost 14 colleagues to COVID-19 The association of resident doctors said it had lost 14 colleagues to COVID-19

Doctors in Nigeria's state-run hospitals have embarked on a strike to demand a pay rise, better welfare and adequate facilities.

The strike by the National Association of Resident Doctors (Nard) is the latest in a string of strikes by medics in Africa’s most populous nation.

More than a third of Nigeria's 42,000 practising doctors will take part in the indefinite strike as the country struggles to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

Doctors' union leader Aliyu Sokomba told the BBC that doctors handling COVID-19 cases would be part of the strike.

He said the strike would not be called off until the government meets their demands.

They want life insurance and death-in-service benefits provided for all health workers and payment of outstanding salaries and allowances.

Nard said that 14 doctors had died from COVID-19 since the country reported its first coronavirus cases in March.

Since the beginning of the pandemic doctors have expressed frustrations over pay and a lack of proper protection for those managing Covid-19 patients.

In June, resident Doctors staged a week-long strike over welfare and inadequate protective kits but doctors treating coronavirus cases continued working.

So far Nigeria has recorded more than 55,000 cases of the virus.