Zimbabwe: Doctors and Nurses Beaten by Police During Peaceful Protest
SW Radio Africa (London) 18 November 2008 Tichaona Sibanda
About one hundred health workers were injured on Tuesday, some of them seriously, after heavily armed riot police baton-charged their peaceful protest march in central Harare.
The health workers from Harare, Parirenyatwa and Chitungwiza hospitals had just embarked on a peaceful procession towards the Ministry of Health offices, to express concern against the total collapse of the health delivery system.
Dr Simba Ndoda, one of the protest organizers and a victim of the police brutality, told us the authorities went to extremes in dealing with the unarmed health workers. He said over one thousand health workers, including doctors, nurses, radiographers,
administrators and pharmacists, had gathered at Parirenyatwa hospital for the protest march.
However hundreds of police in riot gear deployed outside the hospital and cordoned off all link roads. They stopped the health workers and unleashed a baton charge, which left dozens of members of the health fraternity injured.
The
police flushed out leaders of the protest march and manhandled them
before dragging some of them to waiting police vehicles. Unconfirmed
reports say a number of protesters were hauled off to different police
stations.
'This was supposed to be a peacful
demonstration. We were unarmed. We only had our uniforms and
stethoscopes. We tried to reason with the police so that we could
proceed with the march but like a lightining bolt they just set upon
us, without warning and savagely beat us, inflicting serious injuries
on many of our compatriots,' Dr Ndoda said.
The
strike action comes amid the failure of the government to contain the
spread of cholera, which has so far killed hundreds of people, due to
lack of medicines and drugs. The protesters were also demanding that
the government review their salaries, which are not enough to even
provide food for a family. 'Enough is enough' and 'Pay health workers
properly' were some of the banners carried.
The
country's health system, once among the best in Africa, collapsed under
the weight of the world's highest inflation rate, officially estimated
at 231 million percent, but believed to be over 5 quintillion percent.
Most hospitals are now unable to provide even basic medicines.
Dr
Ndoda said conditions at state hospitals were 'traumatising,'
explaining that he had personally seen some of his patients 'die
unnecessarily' because of lack of drugs, medicines and basic equipment.
'It
is very disturbing. There are no drugs, no equipment and now there is
no manpower. The country's three major referral hospitals have been
closed and the government has still not said a word about it. So how
are the ordinary citizens without money going to survive? Asked Dr
Ndoda.
He said the protest was also meant to
show their outrage at the lack of political will by the government to
resolve the health crisis.
The Zimbabwe
Doctors for Human rights strongly condemned the manhandling and
ruthless thrashing of health workers at the hands of the police.A
doctor who asked not to be named said it was strange the government had
resources to deal with a peaceful march, but was doing nothing about
the cholera pandemic that threatened the lives of up to 1.4 million
people.
A statement from Doctors without
Borders said the whole country is at risk if cholera continues to
spread unchecked. Officially state media reports that only 73 people
have died of the disease, but independent estimates put the figure
closer to one thousand. Many tens of thousands have fallen ill.
In Beitbridge, cholera has killed 36 and 431 have
been hospitalised at the border town since last week. Beitbridge
medical officer Taikaitei Kanongara said they expected the number of
victims to rise.



