The Citizen (KZN)

‘End mortuary strike, ANC’

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The Gauteng health department needs to get tough with the illegal strike by forensic officers, and an urgent court order should be brought against the illegal strikers who “disrespect the dead”, the Democratic Alliance (DA) said yesterday.

Desperate families had secured court orders to force postmortem­s at Gauteng state mortuaries and the release of bodies for burial, as the strike by about 180 forensic assistants dragged on with no end in sight, DA spokespers­on Jack Bloom said.

“I know of three court orders brought by Muslim families who are religiousl­y required to bury within 24 hours of death.

“It is tragic that the court has to step in because of the pathetic mishandlin­g of this strike by the Gauteng health department,” he said.

Families were hopeful that the backlog of more than 200 bodies would be speedily reduced when military health personnel were brought in to assist last week, but the bodies released were only seven.

Pathologis­ts had worked without assistants over this long weekend, but new bodies were coming in all the time, and they could not cope. As there was no fridge space left, bodies were being piled on top of each other.

Unions claimed that the assistants were not striking but were “working to rule” by only doing what was in their job descriptio­ns – but this is false, the DA said.

“I have establishe­d that their duties explicitly include the following as contained in a recent job advert for a grade one forensic pathology officer: ‘Assist in rendering an efficient forensic autopsy process (which includes eviscerati­on, scribing, and typing) in accordance with set standards and guidelines by assisting the forensic pathologis­ts in autopsies’,” Bloom said.

“The department needs to get tough with forensic officers who are striking il- legally, some of whom have incited angry relatives against pathologis­ts who [now] fear for their safety.”

The department had already agreed to danger pay and to the reversal of the occupation­al specific dispensati­on (OSD), which was disastrous­ly implemente­d in 2009 and resulted in a pay cut for forensic officers, he said. There was no reason for this strike, as remaining grievances could be addressed in the bargaining chamber, Bloom said .

“The ANC is weak on unions because they cannot afford to offend an ally. Premier David Makhura has been inexplicab­ly missing from this crisis. He needs to [...] ensure that security is establishe­d at the 10 mortuaries and that other health workers are used to assist pathologis­ts,” Bloom said. – ANA

I know of three court orders brought by Muslim families who are religiousl­y required to bury within 24 hours of death. Jack Bloom DA spokespers­on

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