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Strikes and Protests 2007/8 - Index of articles
Government
tells striking doctors it is broke
IRIN News
May 16, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72174
BULAWAYO, 16 May 2007
(IRIN) - The government has told striking doctors, who embarked
on industrial action on Monday to demand a review of their daily
wage of less than US$1, that it is broke.
"Government has
no money, but we understand the doctors' grievances. We, however,
cannot promise anything positive for now, and our appeal to their
striking personnel is that they should return to work for the public's
sake," Zimbabwe's deputy health minister, Edwin Muguti, told
the striking doctors.
"That is our most
passionate appeal at this point in time. We have seen how detrimental
previous job actions have been to the health sector delivery and
the public at large, and really we don't want a repeat of that,"
he told IRIN on Wednesday.
Medical practitioners
at four of Zimbabwe's biggest state hospitals took off their surgical
gloves on Monday, demanding a salary hike and an improvement in
their working conditions, which they described as "pathetic
and inhuman".
The deputy minister's
plea for them to continue working for less than $1 a day has fallen
on deaf ears. Kudakwashe Nyamutukwa, spokesperson for the Hospital
Doctors Association (HDA), said doctors would not resume work until
their grievances were satisfied.
"We offer a very
important service but it is sad we are not treated as such by government,"
he said. "Doctors employed by state institutions earn less
than US$1 a day, which is very ridiculous. We need a wage review
that will put us above the poverty datum line, otherwise it's pointless
going to work now."
Medical practitioners
earn about Z$500,000 a month (US$16), although the consumer council
of Zimbabwe said in its March report that a family of six required
Z$686,115 to meet its basic needs each month. Zimbabwe's latest
official inflation rate is 2,200 percent, the highest in the world.
In previous strike action,
which lasted from January to March this year, demands were for a
monthly salary of Z$5 million (US$166 at the parallel market rate
of Z3$30,000 to US$1), but this time the HDA just wants to sit government
down and negotiate.
At the United Bulawayo
Hospital and Mpilo Hospital in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo,
patients requiring medical attention by doctors were being turned
away, while some nurses were providing a few with treatment.
"This is sad, really
sad. Government has to address the issue of medical personnel's
salaries once and for all," Nobuhle Dube, who was seeking medical
assistance at Mpilo Hospital for a suspected liver infection, told
IRIN.
"Now, in pain as
I am, I have to go back home ... because there is no doctor to administer
treatment to me and many others here," he said. "What
makes it even worse is that I cannot afford treatment at private
hospitals, otherwise I would just go there."
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