Cuba yesterday said it would pull thousands of its doctors from Brazil after the South American nation’s president-elect Jair Bolsonaro questioned their training and demanded changes to their contracts.
The far-right Bolsonaro, who takes office on January 1, said in an interview this month that the 11,420 Cuban doctors working in poor and remote parts of Brazil could only stay if they received 100% of their pay and their families could join them.
Under the terms of the agreement with Cuba, brokered via the Pan-American Health Organisation, Havana receives the bulk of the doctors’ wages.
Bolsonaro threatened to break off diplomatic relations with Havana over the programme, saying it trampled on the rights of the doctors by handing the Cuban government 75% of their pay and denying mothers the right to have their children with them.
“That is just torture for a mother,” Bolsonaro said in the November 2 interview with Brasilia’s Correio Braziliense newspaper.
He also questioned the qualifications of the Cuban doctors and said they would have to renew their licences in Brazil.
Cuba’s health ministry rejected Bolsonaro’s comments as “contemptuous and threatening” to the presence of our doctors” in a statement announcing its withdrawal from the programme.
“These unacceptable conditions make it impossible to maintain the presence of Cuban professionals in the programme,” the ministry said in a statement.
Cuban doctors work in dozens of countries, some without cost to their hosts and others where Cuba charges a fee per doctor, most of which it claims goes to keep the free national health system in Cuba functioning.
The billions of dollars in revenues represent the most important source of export earnings for the Communist-run government.
Since the Brazilian programme, called “More Doctors,” was started in 2013 by leftist former president Dilma Rousseff, about 20,000 Cuban health professionals have served in Brazil, including in 700 municipal districts that had never had a resident doctor, the ministry said.
Bolsonaro said the program could have continued if it complied with his conditions. “Unfortunately, Cuba did not accept,” he said in Twitter post after the Cuban announcement.
Earlier Bolsonaro urged state governors to back the approval of reforms his team is preparing, saying some “bitter” austerity measures are needed to avoid a fiscal crisis such as the one Greece went through.
Bolsonaro said he is about to name his future environment minister, an area where he has been criticised for planning to ease controls. He said he is all for environmental conservation, but not they way it has been done until now, without giving details.
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