Global Times

Coronaviru­s-hit Brazil re-enlists Cuban doctors in fight against pandemic

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Brazil re-enlisted more than 150 Cuban doctors Monday to help fight a surge in coronaviru­s cases, a year and a half after Havana ended a medical assistance program over a row with President Jair Bolsonaro.

The doctors, who had opted to stay in Brazil after the Cuban government pulled the plug on the program that sent them, received new medical licenses from the Brazilian health ministry under a program to round up reinforcem­ents for the overstretc­hed health system.

“The following Cuban physicians are hereby granted licenses to practice medicine under the ‘Mais Medicos’ program,” said an edict published in the official diary.

“Mais Medicos” – More Doctors – is the name of a program under which Cuba sent more than 8,000 doctors to work in under-served public clinics and hospitals in Brazil.

Launched in 2013 under Brazil’s then left-wing government, the program became a top target for far-right leader Bolsonaro, who compared it to “slavery” during his 2018 presidenti­al campaign.

Cuba’s communist government, fiercely proud of its vaunted health system and medical diplomacy, angrily pulled its doctors out of Brazil in November 2018, shortly before Bolsonaro took office.

Hundreds chose to stay, however, in some cases because they had married and started families in Brazil.

But they lost their licenses to practice medicine, and have in many cases been stuck working odd jobs to survive.

Then came the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has rapidly spiralled in Brazil – now the country with the third-highest number of infections in the world after the United States and Russia.

Brazil has registered 254,220 cases and 16,792 deaths from COVID-19, though experts say under-testing means the real figures could be 15 times higher or more.

Bolsonaro has compared the virus to a “little flu” and condemned the “hysteria”

surroundin­g it.

But with many hospitals near breaking point, his government decided in March to bring in extra medical personnel as reinforcem­ents, now extended to include the Cuban doctors.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Supporters of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro block the Marginal Tiete highway in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on May 18, 2020 during a demonstrat­ion in support of the president and for the reopening of trade and against Sao Paulo governor Joao Doria amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Photo: AFP Supporters of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro block the Marginal Tiete highway in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on May 18, 2020 during a demonstrat­ion in support of the president and for the reopening of trade and against Sao Paulo governor Joao Doria amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

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