The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thousands rally for England’s health service

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LONDON: Thousands of protesters marched in London on Saturday in support of England’s state-run National Health Service (NHS).

The march called for ‘no cuts, no closures, no privatisat­ion’ in the NHS and demonstrat­ed against pay restraint. The campaigner­s, who say the NHS is at breaking point, hope the march will put pressure on the government ahead of next week’s budget.

A pillar of the post-World War II welfare state, the NHS is a beloved institutio­n in Britain, but quality of care and funding have become hot political issues.

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, addressed the crowds outside parliament said: “Defending the NHS is defending a basic human value and a basic human right.

“The NHS is in crisis, in crisis because of the underfundi­ng in social care and the people not getting the care and support they need. It is not the fault of the staff. It is the fault of a government who have made a political choice.”

People carried placards reading ‘Health care not profit’ ‘Save our NHS’, ‘Keep our NHS public’ and ‘NHS faces humanitari­an crisis.’

David Wrigley, a family doctor from Carnforth in northwest England and deputy chair of the British Medical Associatio­n council, said: “Today’s march is a cry for help for anyone who uses the NHS because it is in such a desperate situation. I see day-today the serious pressures in the NHS. Patients are not getting the care they deserve. We are a country that can afford the funding that is required.”

NHS doctor Kai Robinstein told AFP: “We know from working at the coal face how close to breakdown the NHS is. My department has large staff vacancies that mean we can’t even fill our duty rosters.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Protesters march with banners and placards against private companies’ involvemen­t in the National Health Service (NHS) and social care services provision and against cuts to NHS funding in central London. — AFP photo
Protesters march with banners and placards against private companies’ involvemen­t in the National Health Service (NHS) and social care services provision and against cuts to NHS funding in central London. — AFP photo

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