HomeNewsResident Doctors Suspend Nationwide Strike

Resident Doctors Suspend Nationwide Strike

Published on


KEY POINTS


  • Resident doctors suspended their nationwide strike and will resume work at 8 a.m. Wednesday after government assurances.
  • The dispute centred on the planned halt of the Professional Allowance Table, which improves doctors’ remuneration.
  • NARD gave the Federal Government until April 21 to pay arrears and release training funds or face fresh strike action.

The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors, NARD, has suspended its indefinite nationwide strike, with members directed to resume work on Wednesday at 8:00 a.m.

The decision followed assurances from the Federal Government that it would reverse its earlier move to halt the implementation of the Professional Allowance Table (PAT) beginning in April 2026.

NARD said the suspension of the strike was reached after deliberations on the government’s commitment to continue implementing the revised PAT. The association had embarked on the industrial action in protest against the planned discontinuation of the allowance structure.

The PAT was introduced following a prolonged strike in 2025 and provides improved remuneration for resident doctors.

Allowance Structure at the Centre of Dispute

Under the revised arrangement, resident doctors are entitled to enhanced payments, including call duty allowances, shift duty allowances, rural posting incentives, and payments for non-clinical duties.

NARD had insisted that discontinuing the allowance table would reverse gains achieved after the previous negotiations with the government.

Despite suspending the strike, the association issued an ultimatum to the Federal Government, demanding the settlement of outstanding issues before April 21.

The demands include payment of promotion arrears, settlement of salary arrears, and release of the 2026 Medical Residency Training Fund.

NARD warned that failure to meet these demands within the stipulated deadline could trigger another round of nationwide strike action.

Latest articles

SMEDAN unveils N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs

SMEDAN has unveiled a N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs, disbursing it through cooperatives and associations to boost working capital and improve loan recovery nationwide.

FG unveils 2026 push for industrial growth, trade and investment

The Federal Government plans to intensify industrial growth, trade expansion, investment and non-oil exports in 2026, focusing on turning policy into measurable economic outcomes.

AfCFTA lifts Nigeria’s intra-African trade by 21 percent to $9.02billion in 2025

Nigeria's intra-African trade rose 21 percent to $9.02bn in 2025, as the AfCFTA unlocked new export markets and lower trade barriers, an Afreximbank report says.

Nigeria sets date for next evacuation flight from South Africa

Nigeria's government will return another group of citizens from South Africa on Tuesday, ahead of anti-immigrant protests set to begin June 30.

More like this

SMEDAN unveils N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs

SMEDAN has unveiled a N500m zero-interest fund for MSMEs, disbursing it through cooperatives and associations to boost working capital and improve loan recovery nationwide.

FG unveils 2026 push for industrial growth, trade and investment

The Federal Government plans to intensify industrial growth, trade expansion, investment and non-oil exports in 2026, focusing on turning policy into measurable economic outcomes.

AfCFTA lifts Nigeria’s intra-African trade by 21 percent to $9.02billion in 2025

Nigeria's intra-African trade rose 21 percent to $9.02bn in 2025, as the AfCFTA unlocked new export markets and lower trade barriers, an Afreximbank report says.