Union tells doctors to resist Uhuru Kenyatta's order

Hours after President Kenyatta and governors administered a full dose of shock therapy to the doctors’ strike, the medics resolved to develop resistance.

Their union, in a private communication to members, urged them not to resume duty as ordered by the president and the Council of Governors.

RESUME DUTY

“While all doctors have been ready to resume duty, doing so under threats, intimidation and show of disrespect is tantamount to career suicide,” Ouma Oluga, secretary-general of Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, said on Wednesday moirning.

“Avoid until when we advise so.”

He urged all members to remain united as they plan to protect their union from government assault.

UNION

The government on Tuesday said it would review the registration and role of KMPDU with a view of reverting its functions to the Health ministry.

“The success of the union depends on the very resolve and the unity we exhibit. Let us guard it,” Dr Oluga said.

While the government side-stepped the ongoing court process to resolve the industrial action, the medics said they were keen to see it succeed.

“We await to conclude the signing of Recognition Agreements, CBA and then after RTWF as was guided by the Court of Appeal under the Mediation of Religious Leaders. We hope this shall be done soon,” he said.

HURDLES

The union accused the government of shifting goalposts during negotiations to end the 95-day strike that has paralysed healthcare in the country.

KMPDU said the government had "mishandled" the industrial dispute and turned it into a "punishment for the doctors".

Dr Oluga said the government side kept introducing hurdles throughout the negotiation.

"When we kept talking about the CBA, the government kept talking about offers and portraying the strike as simply a greedy quest for more money.

THE CBA

"We did eventually talk and concluded the CBA. Yesterday (Monday), having consulted NAC, we decided that the financial offer be put in the CBA which then should be signed and registered.

"And as fate would prove, the goalposts have shifted once again. The same CBA we revised for months should now wait another 30 days for signing and registration thereafter," Mr Oluga said in a statement.

The union is set to issue a comprehensive statement on the matter in Nairobi on Wednesday.

Here is the statement Dr Oluga shared with KMPDU members:

WE SHALL HEAL—

Good morning Colleagues,

I hope you are well.

I'm aware you are all angry, frustrated and disappointed. You should be.

The tens of millions of Kenyans who depend on Public Health facilities are too. I'm too. Ironically, even those who can and should take action and make a difference for our country are equally angry, frustrated and disappointed.

 The point is that we all are feeling the same and that means it is not what will break the impasse.

For 95 days, the Kenyan Doctors have been on a struggle to restore their dignity and determine their destiny.

That struggle has been long and painful. For 95 days, the public hospitals have been minimally or not functional at all.

That was not our wish or objective from the start and the public have grown weary and stretched by the unending stalemate that has been the issue of CBA registration and implementation.

While for the Kenyan doctors it was and has remained purely an industrial dispute between an employer and a group of employees, the strike meant other things and has thus been deliberately mishandled as a punishment for the doctors.

For KMPDU, the strike was never a contest of any sorts. This was simply a struggle to influence public policy relating to how WE the Kenyan doctors  engage our employer, the Government, and how our Healthcare can be made to respond to each of our needs as citizens first and then as Doctors second.

We believed that Doctors United can change healthcare for everybody and bring back the nobility of a profession that is on the brink of collapse. It was about patriotism for our country.

For 95 days, the society has revealed itself to doctors in ways we all never imagined. And if there is one unforgettable outcome of the strike is that we now know what each and everybody in society thinks about doctors.

And we also know how such opinion have affected our profession. And the subtle corporate influence in matters public policy in Healthcare. It is in deed the reason we were in the struggle in the first place.

There has been little doubt that our profession is at threat at the expense of political expediency. And Beyond our immediate need to have our CBA or the union protected, there is urgent need to protect the medical profession.

For 95 days we have been injured in our hearts. By insults and ridicules. We shall heal. We forgive. We have been sacked ad infinitum and we have been character assassinated.

We have been emotionally abused by  use of our moral and ethical obligation to the Hippocratic Oath. We have remained strong and United. We have demonstrated resolve beyond understanding to many.

From the start, there was already a plan to make the doctor tire. To push the doctor to his unbearable limits and finally deal a death blow to the union and the medical profession.

We approached negotiations with utmost good faith and obedience. Responding to every call of meeting and staying late sometimes up to 3am even after you advised us to keep it only up to 5pm.

Because we believed we could quickly come to an agreement and restore industrial harmony.  But there were other plans that we should either have a very bad deal or have nothing at all.

And there in lies what has kept the strike for 95 days. When we kept talking about the CBA, the Government kept talking about offers and portraying the strike as simply a greedy quest for more money.

We did eventually talked and concluded the CBA. Yesterday, having consulted NAC, we decided that the financial offer be put in the CBA which then should be signed and registered.

And as fate would prove, the goalposts have shifted once again. The same CBA we revised for months should now wait another 30 days for signing and registration thereafter.

 The fact is no one wants you to have a CBA. Because a CBA is to a union what the constitution is to a country.

When we are at the very near end, a hurdle is being introduced. Doctors we have done our bit and our bit has been the best. Congratulations.

Let us be angry and frustrated and disappointed. Let us even cry but let us do it for our country and for the millions of citizens who pass through our hands daily in such of health.

Let us do it healthcare. Let us not weep for long because as sure as the sun shall arise, we can only move forward.

No one should never convince you that fighting for what is right is not worth it. No one deserves your anger beyond the need to protect your profession.

Be sure, we shall overcome. But the success of the union depends on the very resolve and the unity we exhibit. Let us guard it.

While all doctors have been ready to resume duty, doing so under threats,  intimidation and show of disrespect is tantamount to career suicide. Avoid until when we advice so.

Finally, it is important to note that while the payroll and the hospital belongs to the government, your skill is selfishly yours. Use it to serve humanity in the best way possible.

But let not you think that it must be forced on you to use it. Your skill as a doctor is what you provide as Labour. How much is it worth? Some dignity perhaps. Some respect certainly!

We await to conclude the signing of Recognition Agreements, CBA and then after RTWF as was guided by the Court of Appeal under the Mediation of Religious Leaders. We hope this shall be done soon.

 

Thank you. God bless you. Keep Calm.

Yours Servant,

Dr. Ouma Oluga

Secretary General

KMPDU.