The Mercury

Vets turn to court over licensing

- Bongani Nkosi

THE SA Veterinari­an Associatio­n (Sava) is dragging Parliament to court over their exclusion from being able to participat­e ahead of the passing of legislatio­n that requires them to acquire licences to dispense medicine.

The country’s vets have a bone to pick with both the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces .

Sava, which represents 1977 vets across the country, has argued in papers filed in the Constituti­onal Court that Parliament cut corners and short-changed vets ahead of passing legislatio­n that required their licensing for prescribin­g and dispensing medication.

Dr Cynthia Charlotte Nkuna, the director and president-elect of Sava, states in an affidavit that both houses of Parliament “failed to comply with their constituti­onal obligation­s to facilitate public involvemen­t” before passing the disputed legislatio­n.

The legislatio­n, the Medicines and Related Substances Act, was proclaimed by former president Jacob Zuma in June last year after Parliament passed it.

Nkuna said the irregulari­ty by Parliament was that its ROME: Workers at a Fiat-Chrysler factory in southern Italy announced yesterday that they would hold a strike over Juventus football club’s signing of star player Cristiano Ronaldo (right).

Fiat-Chrysler Automobile­s (FCA) is controlled by the Agnelli family, whose significan­t holdings include Juventus, which announced a €112 million original draft bill proposing amendments said nothing about the veterinary industry.

“It would seem that the aspect of the licensing of veterinari­ans came as a rather ill-considered and erroneous afterthoug­ht,” said Nkuna.

“The Amendment Bill of February 20, 2014 did not contain anything specifical­ly relating to and affecting veterinari­ans and the veterinary profession.

“For that reason, Sava did not participat­e in the public hearings of October and November 2014 in respect of the Amendment Bill.”

Nkuna said the word “veterinari­an” was slipped into the draft after public hearings had been held.

She alleged that this happened at a meeting the portfolio committee on health held to discuss input received from the public.

She argued that the insertion of the word should have warranted affording concerned profession­als a chance to comment on the bill.

“Significan­tly, the list of persons or bodies consulted during the process of the public hearings did not include any persons or bodies from the veterinary profession, such as state and private veterinari­ans, the SA Veterinary Council or Sava. (R1.7 billion) deal for Ronaldo, from Spanish soccer team Real Madrid on Tuesday. The USB trade union at the Melfi plant said in a statement that it was “unacceptab­le” to spend so much money while “for years workers have been asked by the company to make huge economic sacrifices”.

“Is this fair? Is it normal that one

“Sava and its members have a right to participat­e in any consultati­ve process relating to any changes to the statutory requiremen­ts for veterinary profession­als to practise their profession,” Nkuna added.

Veterinari­ans learnt that the health department supported their licensing on grounds that “experience had shown that they lack knowledge on compoundin­g and dispensing medicine”.

Nkuna said Sava, founded in 1903, and the entire profession did not accept the department’s justificat­ion.

She said had the associatio­n been invited to make input, it would have made “substantiv­e written and oral submission­s against the said amendment”.

Nkuna said licences, which would be issued by the director-general of the health department, constitute­d a “limitation of a veterinari­an’s right to compound and dispense medicines”.

“For the first time in South African history, veterinari­ans now have to be licensed before they can exercise their right to compound and dispense medicines.”

Parliament was yet to file its responding affidavit in the Sava applicatio­n. However, it has indicated to the court that it would opposed the applicatio­n. person should earn millions and thousands of families should run out of money mid-way through the month?” USB said. The union called on FCA to invest more in car production to sustain factory jobs, and called a three-day strike from Sunday. – dpa

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ??
PICTURE: REUTERS
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa