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LAGOS (Reuters) - Nigeria's largest medical union ordered its members in the commercial capital Lagos to go back to work on Thursday, ending a strike over alleged police harassment of doctors as they travelled to and from work during a night curfew.
The West African country has had more than 6,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and 200 deaths. Most of the cases have been in Lagos, sub-Saharan Africa's biggest city with some 20 million people.
A lockdown in Lagos lasting just over a month was eased on May 4, but an overnight curfew was put in place nationwide. Essential workers were given the right to move at all times.
But the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), which represents doctors, said it was not properly implemented and doctors had been harassed by police.
The union, which ordered Lagos members to cease work indefinitely from Wednesday evening, said it had received assurances that doctors would be exempt from the curfew and would be allowed to move freely.
In a statement, the NMA Lagos branch said the industrial action "is hereby reversed and our members are hereby directed to resume work from 6 p.m. today".
(Reporting by Alexis Akwagyiram; Editing by Jon Boyle and Nick Macfie)
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Lagos doctors to end strike after curfew harassment complaint remedied - Midwest Communication
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