Audio By Carbonatix
The Industrial and Labour Division of the High Court in Accra has placed an injunction on the nationwide strike declared by the Ghana Registered and Midwives Association (GRNMA).
In an order for interim injunction, the court, presided over by Justice Priscilla Dikro Ofori, described the strike as illegal, ordering the GRNMA to call it off with immediate effect.
The order by the court, which was granted on Thursday, June 5, 2025, followed an ex-parte application by the National Labour Commision (NLC).
The injunction will last for 10 days, following which the NLC has the option of applying for a further injunction (if they wish) from the court, but it could only do so by serving notice to GRNMA.
In the order, the court restrained GRNMA, its executives, officers, members, agents, servants, employees and other persons linked to them from carrying on with their strike.
“It is hereby ordered that the application is granted and the respondent herein, its executives, officers, members, agents, servants, employees and other persons linked to the respondent are hereby injuncted or restrained from carrying on their illegal strike with immediate effect,” Justice Ofori stated in her order.
Background
The GRNMA had notified the NLC of its intent to embark on industrial action in a letter dated May 29, 2025, in protest over delays in the implementation of their 2024 Collective Agreement.
They accused the Ministry of Health and the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission (FWSC) of failing to honour promises made to them, such as allowances, accommodation issues and workload.
However, the Commission, invoking its powers under Section 138 of the Labour Act, directed the association to suspend all planned actions, including wearing red bands and the eventual withdrawal of services, pending mediation.
While the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission, the Ministry of Health, and the Ministry of Finance all appeared before the Commission on June 4 for a scheduled meeting to iron out the issues, the GRNMA failed to attend and proceeded with the strike.
The NLC subsequently directed the GRNMA to immediately call off its strike and return to work after it declared the industrial action as illegal.
According to the Commission, the nurses and midwives failed to comply with the legal procedures required under Section 159 of the Labour Act, 2003 (Act 651).
The Ministry of Health also appealed to the nurses to return to work while negotiations continue, cautioning that the ongoing industrial action threatens to collapse the already overburdened public healthcare system but the strike continued taking a toll on healthcare delivery in the country, with some major hospitals struggling to provide basic services as some of the wards have been deserted.
Latest Stories
-
BoG to tighten monetary policy in half-year 2026
1 minute -
Parliament approves GH₵357 billion budget for 2026
7 minutes -
MAX and Bolt announce strategic partnership to power electric mobility and vehicle ownership in Ghana
23 minutes -
Greater Accra poultry farmers association says it was excluded from gov’t ‘Nkoko nkiti nkiti’ initiative
37 minutes -
Michael Adangba survives dawn road crash en route to Bolgatanga
41 minutes -
Court remands 40-year-old man for alleged murder
41 minutes -
AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi mine donates fire tender to boost emergency response in municipality
43 minutes -
Gov’t introduces sliding-scale mining royalties to capture price gains
54 minutes -
Global Africa Summit Accra 2025 rallies investors, diaspora and policymakers to boost trade and growth
56 minutes -
New research suggests a better way to fight littering in Ghana
56 minutes -
We must protect our own – Adutwum spokesperson calls for Ashanti solidarity
1 hour -
FDA shuts down 7 Foreign shops in Kumasi over unapproved, foreign-labelled products
1 hour -
13 arrested as Central East Police crack down on crime in Senya Beraku enclave
2 hours -
Kumasi residents raise alarm over poor street lighting ahead of Christmas
2 hours -
Police swoop in Kintampo nabs 13 in drug bust, seizes cannabis and tramadol
2 hours
