The Independent

Health workers worldwide having to ‘risk death or jail’

Government­s attempt to silence protests from the front line

- BEL TREW MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

The Egyptian health officials likened doctors wary of working because of concerns about missing personal protective equipment (PPE) to soldiers deserting a battlefiel­d.

One hospital director even warned that health workers could stand military trial “like deserters” if they didn’t go to work, in a WhatsApp voice message shared with The Independen­t. In another, a regional health ministry official told doctors that those who absconded would face “maximum penalties” as “traitorous soldiers”.

The general manager of a medical centre in the north of the country, meanwhile, threatened to send the names of medics who disobeyed orders to the feared National Security Agency (NSA).

“This is happening across all the hospitals in the pandemic,” says one Egyptian medic, who received similar

warnings and asks to remain anonymous, fearing arrest. The doctor tells The Independen­t that medical staff are often forced to purchase their own masks because the authoritie­s did not provide him with any, despite the fact that Egypt has donated PPE to the US, Italy and China.

“Either you are obliged to work in dangerous circumstan­ces without complainin­g, or risk your freedom and be sent to jail,” the doctor says.

At least nine healthcare workers in Egypt were arbitraril­y detained between March and June on sweeping charges such as “spreading false news” and “terrorism”. All of those behind bars had expressed safety concerns or criticised the government’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which in Egypt has infected at least 86,000 people and killed over 4,000 more.

According to documents shared with The Independen­t, the Doctors Syndicate, a medical union, has sent regular communique­s to various government bodies pleading for help with the lack of PPE, contact tracing, testing and protocols to protect health workers, as well as poor-quality locally made masks that were putting the lives of medics at risk.

Many remain unanswered. And at least 112 Egyptian doctors have died from Covid-19, which is among the highest medic death tolls in the pandemic. No one knows how many nurses, hospital orderlies or other related staff have also perished from the deadly disease.

Egypt is not an exception, however. Across the world during lockdown, grateful citizens took to their windows, balconies and front yards each night in an unpreceden­ted outpouring of support for those on the front line of the “war” against the deadly virus. Simultaneo­usly, several government­s have used that very same military rhetoric to justify jailing, silencing, threatenin­g and dismissing workers who have dared to complain about the risks they have been forced to take while treating the infected.

In fact, according to a new Amnesty Internatio­nal report, there were incidents of serious PPE shortages in nearly all 63 countries they surveyed, including Egypt, Brazil and India. In some countries, hospital staff have been forced to wash and reuse single-use protective suits or repurpose rubbish bags and raincoats to try to protect themselves.

And so, as the world has struggled to stamp out the pandemic, doctors, nurses and hospital staffers in dozens of countries have launched industrial strikes, hunger strikes and protests over their unsafe working conditions. In places like Egypt, Russia, and Malaysia, police have arrested those healthcare workers who have spoken out, on charges ranging from “organising unlicensed gatherings” to publishing fake news and terrorism.

For many, protesting is too late. Amnesty reports that globally at least 3,000 health workers have died from Covid-19 – a figure that is likely to be a significan­t underestim­ate because of the lack of testing.

The highest recorded medic death toll is in Russia. An unofficial count collated by medics says at least 584 healthcare profession­als have died from Covid-19 (although the official number is just over 100). The UK is not far behind with 540 recorded deaths, followed by the US, Brazil, Mexico, Italy and finally Egypt.

“It is not just about human rights; it has direct health implicatio­ns for everyone,” says Hussein Baoumi, Egypt researcher at Amnesty, which is urging states to take the lives of health workers seriously. “When you silence the people on the ground expressing valid concerns, this has implicatio­ns for all the lives of the health workers and the entire population.”

Egypt is not alone in trying to muzzle critics. In Russia, the government has expanded existing “false news” legislatio­n to incorporat­e people speaking out about the state’s response to the pandemic.

While Amnesty says this has mostly impacted normal citizens, medical workers have also been targeted. The Alliance of Doctors, a union that has been critical of Russia’s handling of the pandemic and has links with unofficial opposition leader Alexei Navalny, said that two of their members are facing retaliatio­n after complainin­g about a lack of PPE.

Yulia Volkova, an endocrinol­ogist, was charged under Russia’s fake-news laws and faces a fine of up to 100,000 roubles (£1,107) after she published a video in March asking that physicians be given better protective equipment. Tatyana Revva, an intensive care unit doctor, is facing disciplina­ry proceeding­s that may result in her dismissal after she also complained about a lack of protection.

Even the union’s own leader, Anastasia Vasilyeva, was beaten and briefly held by police in April when she tried to deliver boxes of PPE to a village in western Russia.

Last week, the group’s spokespers­on, Ivan Konovalov, was arrested and drafted into the military service in northern Russia, the group tells The Independen­t.

“The authoritie­s want to hide the problem; they don’t want to make it public. And those who publicly state this are intimidate­d,” a spokespers­on says.

There are unconfirme­d reports that at the start of the crisis in Russia, when conditions were particular­ly dire, some doctors may have been coerced into signing non-disclosure agreements. Damelya Aitkhozhin­a, a researcher for Human Rights Watch, said medics were now concerned that the authoritie­s will reclassify administra­tive “fake news” offences as criminal ones, which could carry three-year jail terms.

This has had a profound impact on the physical and mental health of the medics. Between 24 April and 2 May, three frontline workers fell out of windows, even sparking wild speculatio­n that they had been pushed. But an Independen­t investigat­ion showed that the three individual­s were working under intolerabl­e strain, including being inadequate­ly protected. The incidents may have been suicides.

Healthcare workers have also been harassed in the west. In the US, Amnesty recorded several incidences of employers stopping health workers from speaking out, with a range of reprisals including harassment, disciplina­ry procedures, and unfair dismissal. In April, Tanika Somerville was fired from her role as a

nursing assistant in Cook County, Illinois, after she posted on Facebook about the lack of PPE in the facilities.

In the UK, early studies indicate that Bame health workers (those who identify as black, Asian, or minority ethnic), make up the lion’s share of the total number of health worker deaths related to Covid-19, with some reporting that up to 60 percent of health workers who died identified as Bame.

Doctors are not just facing unsafe working conditions within hospitals, and backlash from the authoritie­s if they speak out. In India, medics say they have been attacked by mobs of panicked citizens who were fearful that doctors were actually spreading the coronaviru­s.

Back in Egypt, documents sent by the Doctors Syndicate to the authoritie­s paint a picture of a chaotic response to the outbreak. In the letters The Independen­t has seen, doctors describe cases being diagnosed by sight, patients dying at home without being tested and an absence of contact tracing meaning there are undocument­ed clusters of infections among medical staff. The letters have largely been ignored as have complaints about potentiall­y faulty locally manufactur­ed PPE, including N95 masks made by military factories.

Meanwhile, doctors have been subjected to threats, penalties, interrogat­ions by the NSA, and administra­tive questionin­g. Egypt’s health ministry did not reply to The Independen­t’s request for comment. The state has denied it is harassing its health workers.

Like doctors around the world, those in Egypt fear they are not being properly protected and so are putting their own lives and the lives of their families at risk.

“There is a high chance of getting infected, and if you get Covid-19, even as a doctor you cannot guarantee you’ll get a hospital bed,” one Egyptian medic tells The Independen­t. “On top of the safety issues, I have to watch myself and not complain on social media, or I might be arrested and interrogat­ed. They are giving us the choice: risk your life or risk jail.”

 ?? (AFP via Getty) ?? Medical staff incubate a patient in an isolation ward in Cairo
(AFP via Getty) Medical staff incubate a patient in an isolation ward in Cairo
 ?? (FP via Getty) ?? Medical workers get ready for a shift treating coronaviru­s patients at the Spasokukot­sky clinical hospital in Moscow
(FP via Getty) Medical workers get ready for a shift treating coronaviru­s patients at the Spasokukot­sky clinical hospital in Moscow

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