Audio By Carbonatix
A coalition representing over 7,000 nurses and midwives has submitted a petition to the Ministry of Health, demanding urgent action over unpaid salaries spanning up to 10 months, despite having received formal financial clearance before assuming duty.
In a press statement, the group, calling itself the Coalition of Unpaid Nurses and Midwives Ghana, says its members were officially recruited via the ministry’s online portal, with some commencing work as early as December 2024, and others in January 2025.
Nearly a year on, many of them claim they have not received a single salary payment.
“We have worked without pay for nine to ten months, even though we were cleared financially before starting,” the petition states. “Our dignity and survival are now at stake.”
The coalition is challenging recent public statements made by the Ministry of Health, which claimed that 7,000 out of 13,500 newly recruited nurses had been paid, and that payments for the remainder were being processed.
“We demand full disclosure with documentary evidence to back your claims,” the petition states. “We deserve transparency and accountability.”
In their submission to the ministry, the coalition outlined three key demands:
- Clear timelines for the payment of all outstanding salaries;
- An explanation as to how financial clearance could allegedly “expire” after recruitment had already been completed;
- An account of why some recruits were paid under the same financial clearance while others were not.
The nurses and midwives accused the ministry of failing to offer any coherent communication or justification for the disparities in salary disbursement and warned that the situation is becoming untenable.
“We have sacrificed in silence, but this is no longer sustainable,” the statement read. “We are keeping the health system running under unbearable conditions, but enough is enough.”
The coalition appealed to the Ministry of Health, urging immediate action to resolve months-long salary arrears affecting thousands of healthcare workers across the country.
“We respectfully urge you to act immediately to restore justice, fairness, and hope to the thousands of nurses and midwives sustaining the health system.”
Latest Stories
-
‘I will support whoever wins’ – Bryan Acheampong pledges loyalty to NPP flagbearer
50 minutes -
‘We’ll come back stronger’ – Bryan Acheampong vows NPP revival after 2024 defeat
1 hour -
Ivory Coast miners start paying higher royalties after failed resistance, sources say
1 hour -
Nigeria’s House to look into row between regulator and Dangote over fuel imports, pricing
1 hour -
UK government considers advertising or subscription model for BBC
2 hours -
Morocco rolls out emergency aid during harsh winter weather
2 hours -
BBC declares it will fight Donald Trump’s defamation claim – but should it?
2 hours -
Second doctor sentenced in Matthew Perry overdose death
2 hours -
Trump expands US travel ban to Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and 2 other countries
2 hours -
Trump’s chief of staff disputes Vanity Fair story in which she criticises Vance and Musk
2 hours -
US unemployment rose in November to a four-year high
3 hours -
Trump repeats criticism of killed Hollywood director Rob Reiner
3 hours -
MIT professor shot at his Massachusetts home dies
3 hours -
Garnacho double at cardiff takes Chelsea through into EFL semis
5 hours -
Three friends jailed 27 years for stealing
5 hours
