Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Egypt’s el-Sissi regime fails to cope with COVID-19 pandemic

- YUSUF SELMAN İNANÇ

THE Egyptian Medical Syndicate (EMS), an associatio­n with more than 230,000 members, has formally joined the criticisms, making a statement on Monday. “The syndicate is warning that the health system could completely collapse, leading to a catastroph­e affecting the entire country if the health ministry’s negligence and lack of action towards medical staff is not rectified,” the statement read.

It is rare that an associatio­n openly criticizes the government in Egypt as the current president, Abdel Fattah el-Sissi has establishe­d an authoritar­ian regime since he took over the power in 2013. “The EMS holds the health ministry entirely responsibl­e for the mounting deaths and infections among doctors due to its negligence ... that is tantamount to death through a derelictio­n of duty,” the statement added. The syndicate also underlined that at least 19 doctors lost their lives due to the policies of the government, which has been refusing to take cautionary measures or to supply necessary protective materials such as masks.

Immediatel­y following this statement, the Egyptian government was hit with another protest from health care workers. Doctors at Mourina Hospital submitted their resignatio­ns en masse as a protest against the government. Their main argument was that their lives are at risk as a 32-year-old physician, Walid Yehia, died of COVID-19 last week. Yehia’s brother said in a Facebook post that the doctor was denied access to a hospital. “His colleagues and I were with him, appealing for help, but there was zero response,” he wrote. Other doctors also claimed that Yehia was not tested for the disease, and he was not accepted into an intensive care unit. The secretary-general of the Egyptian doctor’s union, Dr. Ehab Al Tahir, claimed that the government was conducting propaganda, hoping citizens would put blame on doctors: “The responsibi­lity of the government and parliament is to meet the requiremen­ts of the health system, and we wonder where the millions of dollars meant to deal with the epidemic has been spent if you are not even able to provide protection and treatment to the doctors themselves,” he said.

In response, Health Minister Hala Zayed claimed that the government was supplying necessary materials and providing funds.

Increasing authoritar­ianism in Egypt may be collapsing the country in several fields, from the economy to the health care system. Government dissent is rare, making it remarkable that health workers have begun uttering their voices.

The World Health Organizati­on, along with Egyptian doctors, believes that the number of infected people is much higher, but due to the lack of testing the country’s numbers remain low.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye