Compulsory Service: Ngige objects to Bill ‘putting shackles and chains’ on Doctors

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Chris Ngige, Minister of Labour and Employment, has indicated opposition to a bill before the House of Representatives that would require medical and dental practitioners to serve for a minimum of five years before receiving a full license.

The proposal seeking to amend the Medical and Dental Practitioners Act is sponsored by the lawmaker representing Oshodi-Isolo II Federal Constituency, Ganiyu Johnson.

“The bill in question, I don’t support it,” said Ngige, who made a live appearance Monday on Channels Television’s Politics Today.

He however stated that the legislator in question was “right” to put forward a private member’s bill — a proposed law introduced into a legislature by a lawmaker who is not acting on behalf of the executive branch.

“It’s not an executive bill,” Ngige explained. “Even the speaker cannot stop that bill because the man is coming from a constituency.”

According to him, a private member’s bill in the National Assembly comes from either a legislator’s constituents or is authored by the legislator after a discussion with people in the concerned constituency who agree that the proposal is the solution to their problem.

Ngige however added, “For me, that’s trying to kill a fly with a sledgehammer.”

He argued that it is better for the Federal Ministry of Health to look to the medical school, at which level, dialogue could be initiated around fees payable.

“Those who cannot pay fees, you put them on bond,” he said.

Citing his experience as a medical student, the trained doctor noted that as a scholarship recipient, he was “bonded” under the now-defunct East Central State Government.

“So, that is how they should go, not going to bring a bill that puts shackles and chains on the leg of anybody,” he said.