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ZIMBABWE: Doctors strike continues
IRIN News
November 13, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=37854
JOHANNESBURG
- As state doctors continue their strike in Zimbabwe, the situation
in public hospitals worsens daily, a trade union spokesman told
IRIN on Thursday.
Zimbabwe Congress
of Trade Unions (ZCTU) information officer Mlamleli Sibanda said
that while nurses had returned to work, the continuing stayaway
by doctors was crippling public health services.
Doctors at state
hospitals have been on strike since October, demanding pay hikes
of up to 8,000 percent. They argue that their monthly salaries can
barely cover basic expenses like rent and groceries, as inflation,
currently running at about 450 percent, continues to soar.
Tensions were
raised this week when the public service commission ordered police
to arrest doctors who failed to turn up for work.
A week ago Zimbabwe's
labour court declared the doctors' strike illegal and ordered that
they return to work. But the doctors have refused to do so until
they are assured that their grievances will be addressed.
"They have
not arrested any of the doctors as yet. The doctors have not returned
to work, and about 18 or so have resigned and are going out of the
country [in search] of greener pastures. We expect the situation
to get worse in coming days as ministry is now becoming heavy-handed.
More will resign to look for greener pastures elsewhere," Sibanda
said.
In the meantime,
the situation in hospitals was "terrible", he added.
"Only nurses
are working [at state hospitals] and without doctors it's very difficult,
so the situation at hospitals is very, very terrible. You must also
realise that a lot of Zimbabweans cannot afford to go to private
practice doctors, as quite a lot of people do not have medical aid.
Medication is also very expensive, so the government hospitals are
the ones a lot of average Zimbabweans depend on to get treatment,"
Sibanda explained.
IRIN was unable
to elicit comment from the Ministry of Health on the matter, but
representatives of the strikers have reportedly met with government
officials to discuss their grievances.
The strike has
forced state hospitals to operate with a skeleton staff of nurses,
foreign doctors and redeployed military medical staff.
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