Moz medics’ strike leader arrested

The culprits - mainly police officers, medical practitioners and senior bureaucrats - performed remunerative work outside their official duties for quick cash without the required permission. In some instances, doctors neglected patients for the entire night to look after patients in private hospitals. File photo: Supplied

The culprits - mainly police officers, medical practitioners and senior bureaucrats - performed remunerative work outside their official duties for quick cash without the required permission. In some instances, doctors neglected patients for the entire night to look after patients in private hospitals. File photo: Supplied

Published May 27, 2013

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Maputo -

Riot police and soldiers deployed at Mozambique's main government hospital on Monday amid high tension following the arrest overnight of the leader of a week-old strike by the country's medics.

Around a dozen helmeted police patrolled the parking lot of Central Hospital in the capital Maputo while unarmed soldiers kept a watchful eye in the hospital's corridors as the strike by doctors, nurses and support staff entered its second week.

On Sunday night police arrested the leader of the Mozambican Medical Association, Jorge Arroz, holding him for four hours, local media reported.

Authorities said police took him in for questioning and denied local media reports that he had been charged with sedition.

He was arrested during a meeting with his striking colleagues. Police believed some of their plans “were damaging to human rights,” the head of operations in the police force, Antonio Pelembe, told state radio.

Both the government and the striking medics accuse each other of using intimidatory tactics. The government says strikers have been locking clinics and hospitals to prevent anyone entering, while the strikers say their members have been the victims of “physical and psychological torture”.

Despite the wage dispute by doctors, nurses, ambulance staff, cleaners and laboratory staff, the health ministry claims to have the situation under control.

Medical workers, many of whom earn under $600 (460 euros) a month, want their salaries doubled.

They are dissatisfied with a 15 percent-raise they received last month following a strike in January.

There were no doctors in sight at the emergency rooms of the Maputo Central Hospital on Monday morning.

“We have been waiting here for three hours. They don't seem to have emergency doctors. We don't know whether to stay or leave,” Adelina Taimo, who had brought in an injured friend, told AFP.

Mozambican authorities have had to call in military and foreign doctors and volunteers from the international Red Cross, as well as drafting in nursing students to fill in the gaps. Several retired nurses told AFP they had agreed to come back to work to help out. - Sapa-AFP

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