The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Moyo shoots down e-recruitmen­t claims

- Yeukai Karengezek­a Herald Correspond­ent

THE Ministry of Health and Child Care has shot down claims circulatin­g on social media that it has reversed the use of e-recruitmen­t for nurses following an incident that occurred in Bulawayo on Monday over the use of the new applicatio­n system.

This comes after Zapu, a political party, vowed to go ahead with its planned sit-in at Mpilo Central Hospital and United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) nursing school, in protest over what it is claiming to be unfair recruitmen­t of student nurses.

Reports were that the two institutio­ns recently enrolled trainees from other regions and overlooked applicatio­ns from the Matabelela­nd region.

Health and Child Care Minister Obadiah Moyo cleared the air on Wednesday during his speech at Chitungwiz­a Central Hospital graduation and prize-giving day for nurses and midwives held at the Leisure Centre.

“Following the recent e-recruitmen­t of nurses, it is noted that there was some informatio­n circulatin­g on social media purporting that Ministry of Health and Child Care had reversed the recruitmen­t of nurses in Bulawayo,” he said.

“I want to inform the public that the informatio­n is not true and would want to condemn under any circumstan­ces the behaviour by such people and organisati­ons.”

Minister Moyo said nurse training was a national issue, hence students were expected to attend schools chosen by the system as long as it was in the country.

“Let me inform the nation that while a few people from Matabelela­nd region got places to train from schools of training in Bulawayo and surroundin­g areas, there are many who got training places in other provinces and no noise has been made,” he said.

“The training of nurses is not regionalis­ed, but it is a national issue.”

Minister Moyo said his ministry was simply implementi­ng recommenda­tions that came from the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission in order to reduce and eliminate corruption in the recruitmen­t of nurses.

“It is not surprising that those who were beneficiar­ies of corrupt tendencies are the ones making noise and creating the non-existent confusion,” he said.

“For avoidance of doubt, all the statistics of who came from where can be found in our nursing directorat­e and can be accessed without any problems.”

Minister Moyo said the decentrali­sation of e-recruitmen­t was progressin­g well, with provinces and central hospitals expected to implement the policy direction once the ministry was satisfied that all loopholes in the system have been plugged.

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