Migori nurses vow to continue with strike over unmet demands
Nyanza
By
Anne Atieno
| Aug 13, 2025
Nurses in Migori County have vowed to continue with the strike until their demands are met.
Kenya National Union of Nurses (KNUN) the acting Migori branch Secretary Ezekiel Mbira said the government was yet to respond to address their grievances.
“Migori County nurses are still on strike,” Mr Mbira said.
The nurses' strike, which started on August 8, 2025, has affected health services in public hospitals within the county and patients seeking treatment are being turned away.
READ MORE
Eight Kussco staff on police radar over leaked documents
Airtel, Vodacom ink network infrastructure sharing pact
Co-op Bank posts Sh14.1b profit amid branch, digital expansion
Fuel prices drop marginally in latest Epra review
Lessons Kenya can take from Azerbaijan
Lenders given 6-months to roll out risk-based loan pricing model
KCB shareholders set for record Sh13b dividend boom on half-year profit jump
Sudan moves to unlock disputed key trade corridor with Kenya
Bulk buyers: What the property market misses in turnaround plan
A spot check by the Standard at Migori County Referral Hospital revealed empty benches at the immunisation and antenatal care unit, after mothers were turned away.
Most patients opted to seek services at private hospitals.
Mbira said a strike notice was issued on May 28, 2025 but services were not paralysed then after the conciliation process through the Ministry of Labour was initiated.
The union resolved to begin the strike on August 8 if their grievances were not addressed.
The nurses are demanding implementation of salary structure of 2024 which is dated September 12, 2024, promotion and redesignation and implementation of the return-to-work formula of 2017.
Mbira claimed that Migori County government did not honour the salary structure of 2024 policy that was ratified by the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC).
“That has been a concern to us because there has been an issue of low payment to the nurses,” the acting branch secretary said.
He said delayed promotion and redesignation has seen more than 400 nurses stagnate in one job group for more than four years.
However, he said there are some progress that the employer is making.
“We are anticipating that it will be fully implemented as previously agreed,” Mbira stated.
He faulted the employer for not implementing the return-to-work formula of 2017.
Mbira questioned why this was not being implemented, yet it would improve the welfare of nurses in the county.
“This is a document that has been there for all these years,” Mbira said.
The nurses held a meeting with a section of Migori County officials on August 11, 2025 before declaring that they would continue with the strike until their demands are met.