[Afghanistan] Doctors protest 14 months of unpaid salaries

[Afghanistan] Doctors protest 14 months of unpaid salaries
15 Oct 2021

Hundreds of doctors from the Afghan provinces of Samangan and Nuristan gathered at the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) in Kabul to demand their unpaid salaries, RepublicWorld.com reports.

The doctors staged a protest and asked the World Bank to handle the situation; they have not been paid for the last 14 months. According to Khaama Press, the protestors also said that their clinics in their respective areas were suffering from a serious lack of medicine.

The protesting doctors accused an Afghan World Bank contractor, Asad Fayaz, of fleeing the country and stealing money from the World Bank. The doctors said that Fayaz was providing medical services, drugs, and doctor salaries throughout the provinces under a two-year health contract.

Doctors warn of continued protests if salaries are not paid

According to Khaama News reporting, a protestor said that Asad Fayaz has taken their money and escaped Afghanistan. The protestor also said that in the provinces of Samangan and Nuristan, Asad led a corrupt firm, which resulted in a spike in infant and maternal mortality. The protesting doctors said in a statement that because the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has no contacts with the World Bank and hence is unable to request funds, they have asked the World Bank to send their funds directly to the country's health ministry or other non-governmental organisations. Meanwhile, doctors have warned that they will continue to protest if their salaries are not paid.

Banks have been closed since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in mid-August, leaving millions of people without cash. Employers have failed to pay their employees and those people with money in their accounts are unable to withdraw it. The situation in the country is rapidly deteriorating since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan on August 15 forcing the Ashraf Ghani-led government to resign.

News agency Xinhua reported that the Taliban's administration recently paid government employees salaries for two months in a number of departments in Afghanistan, including education. But the majority of the state's 400,000 employees have been working without pay since July.

Source: RepublicWorld.com

Hundreds of doctors from the Afghan provinces of Samangan and Nuristan gathered at the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) in Kabul to demand their unpaid salaries, RepublicWorld.com reports.

The doctors staged a protest and asked the World Bank to handle the situation; they have not been paid for the last 14 months. According to Khaama Press, the protestors also said that their clinics in their respective areas were suffering from a serious lack of medicine.

The protesting doctors accused an Afghan World Bank contractor, Asad Fayaz, of fleeing the country and stealing money from the World Bank. The doctors said that Fayaz was providing medical services, drugs, and doctor salaries throughout the provinces under a two-year health contract.

Doctors warn of continued protests if salaries are not paid

According to Khaama News reporting, a protestor said that Asad Fayaz has taken their money and escaped Afghanistan. The protestor also said that in the provinces of Samangan and Nuristan, Asad led a corrupt firm, which resulted in a spike in infant and maternal mortality. The protesting doctors said in a statement that because the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has no contacts with the World Bank and hence is unable to request funds, they have asked the World Bank to send their funds directly to the country's health ministry or other non-governmental organisations. Meanwhile, doctors have warned that they will continue to protest if their salaries are not paid.

Banks have been closed since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in mid-August, leaving millions of people without cash. Employers have failed to pay their employees and those people with money in their accounts are unable to withdraw it. The situation in the country is rapidly deteriorating since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan on August 15 forcing the Ashraf Ghani-led government to resign.

News agency Xinhua reported that the Taliban's administration recently paid government employees salaries for two months in a number of departments in Afghanistan, including education. But the majority of the state's 400,000 employees have been working without pay since July.

Source: RepublicWorld.com

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