Truro News

Kenya’s public doctors to end 100-day strike

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Thousands of doctors at Kenya’s public hospitals have agreed to end a 100-day strike that saw people dying from lack of care, an official with the doctors’ union said Tuesday.

The strike was blamed for dozens of deaths, as the majority of Kenyans cannot afford private health care.

The government and union officials signed a deal to address pay and other issues in dispute, said Dr. Ouma Oluga, the secretary-general of the Kenya Medical Practition­ers, Pharmacist­s and Dentists Union.

Doctors will resume work Friday even though the agreement says they should resume immediatel­y, he said.

“It is regrettabl­e that it took so long. Kenyans have suffered ... we cannot fathom the extent of pain which Kenyans felt in the 100 days,” said Kenya’s health minister, Cleopa Mailu.

President Uhuru Kenyatta last week threatened to fire the 5,000 doctors if they didn’t return to work, but doctors defied him. Earlier, seven union officials were jailed for a month for contempt of court for not ending the strike.

Oluga said the biggest achievemen­t in the agreement is that doctors now will work just 40 hours a week and will be compensate­d for extra hours. Previously, doctors in public hospitals were on call at all times.

“It’s a win-win for everybody,” Oluga said.

Doctors had pushed for the implementa­tion of a 2013 collective bargaining agreement that committed the government to increase pay, restore dilapidate­d public health facilities and consistent­ly train doctors, among other issues. It also set out measures to address the East African country’s huge shortage of doctors.

The government has said it does not recognize the 2013 collective bargaining agreement.

Now the labour court will oversee the implementa­tion of the agreement in 60 days, Oluga said.

Kenya’s public doctors, who train for six years at universiti­es, earn a basic salary $400$850. That’s similar to some policemen who train for just six months.

Kenya’s doctors also went on strike in 2012 to protest the bad state of public health care. Emergency rooms in some public hospitals frequently don’t have gloves or medicine, and power outages sometimes force doctors to use their cellphones to provide adequate light for a surgical procedure.

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