Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Government docs New Year resolution: Carry on striking

GMOA announces new ‘terror’ campaign if ‘extra duty money’ does not line their pockets and warns Govt at stake over SAITM

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For Lankan doctors belonging to the GMOA, it will be business as usual in the dawning New Year. They will be taking the same pill for their ailment, imaginary or otherwise: the placebo they hold as the panacea for all their ills: Carry on striking. And damn Lanka’s sick. Unlike the kind and comforting bedside manner of the family doctor paying a home visit and assuring the ill and injecting them with hope that all will be well, the nation’s doctors, educated at public expense, had a morbid message to deliver to the people when, in a house call to the nation, they announced this week that things would only get from bad to worse. That they planned mass premeditat­ed manslaught­er on the masses this new year too if the government wouldn’t let them have their way.

While thousands of Lankans were following doctors orders and making the customary New Year vows to abstain from smoking, drinking and eating less, the Government doctors announced their own New Year Resolution:

“If it be in our interest, be it for pecuniary or political reasons, whether concerned with the interest of the medical profession or otherwise however remote it may be connected to the interest of our profession, we hereby announce to the general public that our resolution for the New year is that, if the executive committee of the Government Medical Officers Associatio­n should deem it fit that we should strike for whatever reason, for whatever purpose, we shall so strike no matter how hazardous it may be to the wellbeing, health and threat to the life of the general mass of Lanka’s citizens.”

That was the message the GMOA announced the day after Christmas. It said it would resort to a strike in early January if the authoritie­s failed to increase their ‘extra duty’ allowance.

GMOA Secretary Dr. Haritha Aluthge said the extra duty allowance was paid based on a formula, which was prepared according to the basic salary of a medical officer which was last increased in 2016. However, the extra duty allowance had not been increased, following the increase in the basic salary. Therefore, he said the GMOA would resort to a stern strike action with the participat­ion of all the medical officers if the authoritie­s failed to respond to their request.

In other words, for a few bucks more, instead of decide what is to be done with the students”. In other words, let’s first kill the Mother Hen and then decide what to do with the chicks.

Last year, the GMOA came of age. They discovered, to their own surprise, perhaps, the immense power they wielded over the pulse and heartbeat of the nation. Where NM’s hartals had failed to bring any tangible results, where Tampoe’s strikes had fizzled out like damp squibs, the government doctors’ trade union realised the potent power they held. Something no trade union has held before or will hold. The power to play God To hold the nation’s sick and dying as hostages of fortune to coerce the government to pay up or else face the price of death on the government’s doorstep, in the wards of all government hospitals. Where other trade unions could only cause some inconvenie­nce to the public, doctors could deny them their lives by depriving them their right to medical attention when they most needed it. The catalogue of deaths caused as a result of doctors striking, may never be known. For when patients are turned away from government hospitals bereft of the medication sought, they may have died at home and the cause of death attributed to their illness but never to medical negligence due to them being abandoned to their fate.

The year 2017 saw a summer of strikes. It began in February. Irked at the January 31 Court of Appeal decision which went against their position on SAITM, the doctors took to the streets to show their muscle and contempt.

With its February 3rd protest march, this GMOA brigade of doctors threw down the gauntlet on the city street, implicitly declaring that, whilst it would raise their stethoscop­e in salute to a judgment made in their favour, they would revolt at a verdict that went against their vested interest. It was the drizzle that heralds the storm, the first sinister signal that worse would follow if the judgment of the court were let to hold sway. And true to their recent satanic form, the GMOA fiends kept their demonic word.

It was not to be a nationwide strike. That would serve for afters. Like torture works best when administer­ed dose by dose, the sadistic GMOA took their misery clinic from province to province on a staggered basis for the most potent effect.

As the SUNDAY PUNCH wrote of it in March: “Uva got it first. On February 20th, patients in all government hospitals and those coming to attend the monthly clinic and seeking treatment for their ills, found all government hospitals in this second largest province bereft of doctors.

The GMOA’s mobile misery clinic then turned the compass south the following day, the 21st , and brought home to the sickened populace of the southern province, the stark truth that they, due to issues beyond their ken, were to be denied the care, medication and treatment they so earnestly sought and eage rly expected to receive.

Two days later on February 23rd, the people of the Eastern Province and the North Central Province were to receive the same repugnant dose of the same repugnant medicine, brought about by the GMOA’s premeditat­ed act to strike where it hurts most and to play dice with people’s lives.

Four days later, on February 27th, it was the turn of the sick in the North Western Province to be denied the wealth of health, even as it was the sad fate of those afflicted with illness in the Central Province to be denied medical care and treatment.

The following day, March 1st, Sabaragamu­wa province was hit and its infirm was held hostage denied medical attention. The following day, it were the people of Jaffna and others in the Northern Province who, having been held as pawns by Tiger terrorists in a bid to win their demands for a utopian Eelam, now were forced to experience a replay at the hands of government doctors who showed the same callousnes­s as the Tigers had done; and ruthlessly held their lives to ransom by denying them the bare medical treatment.

And then the following day, exactly a month after their campaign of protest against the Court of Appeal decision had begun, the GMOA circus of death, arrived in the Western Province to make capital out of cruelty and once again, as they had callously done without an iota of human compassion in the other provinces, staged a repeat and forced the feeble, the weak, the sick, many old many feeble and all of them poor, to walk the tight rope, balancing between life and death, without the safety net of medical care”.

Many other strike actions have followed since; some without notice, but all forgetting the fact is the poor, the sick of this country who have suffered the consequenc­es. Not the MPs who fly to Singapore even for a sneeze, not the affluent, not those covered by medical insurance and, yes, not even the masses who for the moment are hale and hearty and whose loved ones are also hale and hearty for the moment, can understand to that exquisite degree the anguish of the poverty ridden, disease struck section of the public when they find no doctor in the house to attend to them -- and told to try their luck the following day.

But when one is struck down by illness, tomorrow may never come. Only the man with the wound knows the pain. And only the heartless can deny him the gift of his medical expertise to ease the suffering. It is the quintessen­ce of man’s inhumanity to man, the most extreme form of sadism -- and practised by a group who hail themselves and love to be hailed and bestowed respect and honour by the public as gods of healing.

A group of men who have taken the time honoured Hippocrati­c Oath when they received their license to practice medicine and sworn upon all the healing gods to “use treatment to help the sick according to my ability and judgment, but never with a view to injury and wrong- doing”. And vowed to themselves: “Now if I carry out this oath, and break it not, may I gain for ever reputation among all men for my life and for my art; but if I transgress it and forswear myself, may the opposite befall me”.

If the doctors union carries on striking again this year, too in the same cavalier callous manner it did last year, perhaps the time has come for the Government, as it did last year with the railway workers, to declare the medical profession an essential service and warn the GMOA that the personal assets of government doctors who flout the essential services order and go on strike will be forfeited, even as Mrs. Bandaranai­ke's government threatened to confiscate the personal property of doctors if they continued with the strike they had launched during her regime.

If anything would get them scurrying back from their striking holes, that should do the trick.

 ?? ?? GMOA Naveen de Zoysa: Abolish SAITM or else
GMOA Naveen de Zoysa: Abolish SAITM or else

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