Khaleej Times

Govt gets rid of foreign-funded health experts

- Reuters

new delhi — India is dismissing dozens of foreign-funded health experts working inside the government, a move seen as part of a broader clampdown on the influence of non-government organisati­ons (NGOs) on public policy.

The loss of these profession­als, most of whom are Indian nationals, has raised concern that signature programmes to combat HIV/ Aids and tuberculos­is may suffer just as they face funding shortages due to slow bureaucrac­y.

A shortage of technical experts has for years forced India to turn to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and aid groups such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to manage large-scale public health schemes.

Of the nearly 140 people who run India’s HIV/Aids programme, 112 are consultant­s seconded from foreign organisati­ons. Some are engaged in planning and monitoring of prevention activities in highrisk Indian states.

Last week, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government ordered 45 of them to be removed from service by June as they had served more than three years, according to health ministry officials and a document seen by Reuters.

By December, 70 of these experts will leave, while others who have worked for less than three years face a government screening committee to decide whether they are still needed.

“It’s like questionin­g our integrity just because we are foreign- funded,” said an HIV/Aids consultant who worked in the health department for three years and is now looking for a job.

Infections reduced

The programme has won global acclaim for sharply reducing new HIV infections, but the rate of decline has slowed in recent years. India recorded 86,000 new infections last year.

S. Selvakumar, a joint secretary in the Finance Ministry who signed off on clarificat­ions to the new policy rules in January, said he did not know why consultant­s working in the government were being removed. He said the ministry had received a request from the cabinet secretaria­t to compile a list of government consultant­s last May.

Two other Finance Ministry officials said the move was driven by fears that foreign agencies could use their consultant­s to influence policy in New Delhi. “Their loyalties would be divided,” said one of the officials.

Security of informatio­n was also a concern, the other official said.

More than 500 consultant­s work across the Indian government, about half in the health sector alone. Some are from Britain’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) and the United Nations children’s agency Unicef.

A DFID spokesman said the department had “not received any complaints from the government of India about data theft or undue influence on policies”. —

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