Judgement in IHS lecturers case in August

FRANCISTOWN: Judgment in the High Court case in which 113 nursing lecturers at the Institute of Health Sciences (IHS) are suing the Director of Public Service Management (DPSM) for overtime allowances will be delivered on August 24. The case is before Justice Modiri Letsididi.

The lecturers at various branches of IHS in the country want an order declaring that by virtue of their positions in the nursing cadre, they are entitled to 30 percent overtime allowance paid to the other nurses.  They aver that the duties they are assigned by the Ministry of Health (MoH) to train and produce dependable nurses should attract the same allowance as other nurses.

"This is paid to all the nurses employed by MoH and to all the nurses that are trained and produced by us from the institutions," the lecturers argue. They say that should the court uphold their plea, they should be given back pay from the date that such allowance was due to them. The allowance was introduced on April 1998 under the Directive Number 18.  Dr Victor Mokowe, a senior lecturer at IHS Francistown stated in the founding affidavit that: "The nurses who are doing lecturing duties are first and foremost nurses and are doing all the duties done by other nurses". The allowance is supposed to cater for overtime and nurses retention allowance, the applicants argue.

Editor's Comment
Human rights are sacred

It highlights the need to protect rights such as access to clean water, education, healthcare and freedom of expression.President Duma Boko, rightly honours past interventions from securing a dignified burial for Gaoberekwe Pitseng in the CKGR to promoting linguistic inclusion. Yet, they also expose a critical truth, that a nation cannot sustainably protect its people through ad hoc acts of compassion alone.It is time for both government and the...

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