Friday, September 14, 2012

Cabinet forms team to end wave of strikes


By AUGUSTINE ODUOR
As the country slides steadily to a standstill over ongoing labour unrest, the Government has created a Cabinet sub-committee to resolve the industrial disputes.
The move comes as major operations in key hospitals that require the intervention of doctors are paralysed after the health workers downed their tools (See story on Page 9).
At the Cabinet meeting, President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga failed to come up with a concrete decision to end the ongoing teachers’ strike. Children in public primary and secondary schools will have to contend with more suffering at home. The Cabinet sub-committee begins work today under the chairmanship of Public Service Minister Dalmas Otieno, and will include Ministers John Munyes (Labour), Mutula Kilonzo (Education), Margaret Kamar (Higher Education), Anyang’ Nyongo (Medical Services), Njeru Githae (Finance), and Attorney General Githu Muigai.
It is supposed to come up with a solution to the industrial unrests by the teachers, doctors, and university lecturers.
Cabinet said it was unfair that pupils in public schools remained idle while their colleagues in private institutions were completing the syllabus and revising ahead of national examinations.
It also expressed concern that patients ware suffering in hospitals for lack of proper care and appealed to all “striking public servants to obey court orders that declared the strikes illegal and go back to work”.
The Cabinet meeting, chaired by President Kibaki, asked public servants not to shun dialogue, but “within the public sector wage setting as provided for under the framework of the Salaries and Remuneration Commission”.
Teachers and doctors have ignored court orders to end the strike. Sources told The Standard late Thursday that the Cabinet team would be seeking to harmonise teachers’ salaries with those of civil servants. This move, earlier rejected by teachers, is bound to anger them more as they insist the State should honour their demands for a pay increment.
The ongoing teachers strike enters its tenth day today with pupils in private schools the only ones carrying on with learning during this critical third term of the academic calendar.
The Cabinet team is expected to meet the Teachers Service Commission (TSC) today in a move to explore ways of ending the strike.
This comes even as on Wednesday this week, Parliament’s Committee on Education asked the two principals to act decisively during Cabinet meeting Thursday to end the strike.
Finance minister Githae failed to attend two consecutive meetings convened by the David Koech-led committee to shed light on financial implications of the strike.
Githae had requested that the meeting be pushed to next week Tuesday, but the House team said the need for children to resume learning is urgent.
Another extended House committee meeting slated for Thursday was also postponed.
Koech said the meeting was aimed at finding alternative sources of funding to meet teachers’ demands with a view to reopening public schools.
Speaking to The Standard Thursday for the first time since the strike began, Kenya National Union of Teachers (Knut) Secretary General Okuta Osiany asked teachers to stay put. He said the demands of the teachers are manageable by the Government and asked teachers not to relent.
“The Government has money to settle teachers’ demands, but they have even failed to call my team to a mature negotiating table. But let them buy time because teachers will not let this one slip,” he said on phone.
Okuta fell ill a few days to the start of the strike and his chairman, Wilson Sossion has been leading the industrial action that has paralysed learning in public schools. “We will not call off the strike until all our demands are met,” said Sossion.
Knut has been pushing for full implementation of Legal Notice Number 534 of 1997 calling for a 300 per cent salary hike, complete with harmonisation of their pay with those of civil servants.
In its brief to the Government, TSC has advised that some Sh13.5 billion is needed to harmonise teachers’ basic pay with that of public servants.
TSC Secretary Gabriel Lengoiboni said this translates to Sh1.12 billion every month.
He also indicated that another Sh29 billion would be needed to fully meet the demands of the unions.
But matters have been complicated by the introduction into the dispute of Legal Notice Number 16 of 2003 that amended the allowances as was provided for in the 1997 agreement, but which was rejected by Knut.



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