Many medical doctors in Nigeria have applied for job positions
with the Saudi Arabia ministry of health.
The recruitment exercise was organised by the ministry in
conjunction with Successlink Consult in Ikeja, Lagos state capital, on Sunday.
The job offer was for consultants and specialists in all
medical fields, excluding psychiatrists.
Among those present for the interview were medical consultants and doctors in various areas of specialisation.
It was gathered that each applicant paid N10,000 as the
application fee after which medical certificates, means of identification, and
other documents were tendered at the point of documentation.
After payment, the medical doctors were screened before a
panel of Saudi Arabian personnel.
Speaking with TheCable, one of the applicants who
specialises in hematology — a branch of medicine concerned with the study of
blood, the blood-forming organs, and blood diseases — described the screening
as the “shortest interview of my life”.
“I showed them my
original documents before going in and also presented the duplicates which they
took to the interviewers. After making the payment, I was taken inside for the
interview. The interview lasted like one minute, I think it’s the shortest
interview of my life,” he said.
“I have been hearing about such recruitments for a while but
I have never applied. This is my first time.”
This is not the first time Saudi Arabia will woo Nigerian
medical doctors with job offers.
In March 2019, a similar exercise was held at a popular
hotel in Lagos while another took place in Abuja.
At the time, Chris Ngige, minister of labour and
productivity, had claimed that there is nothing wrong with doctors leaving
Nigeria as the country has “more than enough” medical personnel.
“There are surplus in their country and we also have surplus
in the medical profession in our country. I can tell you this. In my area, we
have excess,” Ngige had said.
“Who said we don’t have enough doctors? We have more than
enough. You can quote me. There is nothing wrong in them travelling out.”
A fact check by TheCable revealed that the minister’s claim
is false as WHO data showed that Nigeria is among the countries with a very
poor doctor-to-patient ratio as of 2013 — which is the most recent data.
NIGERIAN MEDICAL
DOCTORS AND STRIKE ACTIONS
The latest recruitment exercise comes amid ongoing strike
action by the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD).
The doctors had commenced the strike on August 1 over
“irregular payment of salaries”, among other issues.
Efforts by the House of Representatives to mediate between
the federal government and NARD ended in a deadlock.
Over the years, medical doctors have engaged in strike
actions while agitating for improved welfare conditions and increased
allocation to the health sector.
In April, resident doctors had embarked on a strike action
to protest their poor remuneration and conditions of service.
Prior to the time, the doctors had engaged in a similar
action in September 2020 amid rising COVID-19 cases.
A Nigerian doctor gets N5,000 as monthly hazard allowance
while senators are paid 248 times higher (N1.24 million) to buy newspapers
monthly.
This situation, among others, has forced many medical
doctors to leave the country in search of greener pastures.
In 2018, research by Africa Check showed that at least 12
doctors leave Nigeria for the UK every week.
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