Zimbabwe state doctors who were fired for going on strike have
rejected a government offer to return to work, their union said on
Friday.
The doctors went on strike on September 3 to protest against poor wages, in some cases less than $100 a month.
President
Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government, which responded to the job boycott by
firing 448 doctors and pursuing disciplinary action against more than
1,000 others, on Thursday offered to reinstate them if they returned to
work within 48 hours.
Zimbabwe is experiencing its
worst economic crisis in a decade that has seen resurgent inflation
soaring to three-digit levels, eroding salaries and bringing back bitter
memories of the hyperinflation era of a decade ago.
According
to the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA), the last wage
offer by the government would see the doctors earning a total package,
including allowances, of Z$3,900 (about US$240) per month.
“Sadly,
the moratorium has come without a new offer on the table having been
communicated to us,” ZHDA said, explaining its rejection of the offer.
The strike by junior and middle-level doctors has paralysed state hospitals, used by Zimbabwe’s poor majority.
Even before the strike, the hospitals had already been struggling with shortages of drugs and other basic products.
Critics
say President Emmerson Mnangagwa has failed to keep promises he made in
last year’s election campaign to revive the economy by pushing through
reforms, attracting foreign investment and rebuilding collapsing
infrastructure.
On Thursday Parirenyatwa Hospital, the
country’s biggest, was deserted, with only a handful of desperate
patients being attended to by nurses.
Sheila
Muzanenhamo, who lives in one of Harare’s poorest townships, Epworth,
grimaced as she explained how she had been turned away from the hospital
because there was no doctor to attend to her.
“I have
been here since dawn, hoping to get assistance but the nurses said they
could not help me,” said Muzanenhamo. “They told me to go to private
doctors, but I have no money to pay for that.”
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