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Buhari Gives Coronavirus As Excuse For Not Meeting Salary Demands Of Health Workers

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President Muhammadu Buhari has said that the coronavirus outbreak is affecting Nigeria’s crude oil sales.

Garba Shehu, a presidential spokesperson, revealed this in a statement on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, in which he quoted the president as saying this in a meeting with members of the Joint Health Sector Unions, JOHESU, and Assembly Healthcare Professionals Associations, AHPA, at Aso Rock.

During the visit, the union requested the president’s intervention in the adjustment of consolidated health salary structure (CONHESS), the withheld April and May 2018 salaries of members, gazetting of the scheme of service for nurses and restoration of teaching allowances among others.

Responding, Buhari appealed to the health workers to be patient with his administration to address their demands as the country tackles the challenges posed by coronavirus to the economy.

He assured them that the government was looking into their issues with a view to resolving them and asked them to continue to work for the development of the country.

Buhari
President Buhari receiving a presentation from JOHESU National Chairman Com. Biobelemoye Josiah during a Courtesy Visit by Joint Health Sector Union (JOHESU) in State House on 10th Mar 2020 | State House Photo

“Your case is certainly receiving attention, but you must bear in mind the condition that the country is in now. Coronavirus is not improving matters,” the president was quoted to have said.

“It is affecting what we very much depend on, the petroleum industry and therefore revenue.

“So, please try and help us with your people. Let us be patriotic, let us look at the ways and means of the government and appeal for restraint…We have to emphasise that it is very important we maintain cohesion together because if we allow sentiments or popularity to overwhelm our reasoning faculties, we will be in trouble and it will be too late for us to adjust, so please bear with us.”

The president added that his administration’s successful drive for food sufficiency in the last four years would come in handy with the drop in government revenue.

“We thank God; God is very sympathetic to us. The three previous rainy seasons were good. We had good foresight in getting fertiliser, making it available and we virtually achieved food security,” he said.

“We made good decisions, and we saved hundreds of millions of dollars on the importation of food. If not, we would have been in real trouble.

On Monday, Buhari set up a committee to review the 2020 budget crude oil benchmark following the falling crude oil price.

The 2020 budget was based on a crude oil benchmark of $57 per barrel with a production capacity of 2.1 million barrels per day and projected oil revenue of N2.64 trillion.

But the spread of the virus through more than 110 countries has negatively affected the price of crude oil globally.

As of 4:20pm on Monday, crude oil was trading at $36.85 per barrel.

Zainab Ahmed, minister of finance, budget and national planning, is to head the committee.

Other members are Godwin Emefiele, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Timipre Sylva, minister of state for petroleum; Mele Kyari, group managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), and Clement Agba, minister of state for budget and national planning.

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