Dialogue needed to solve problems at hospital in Jayapura
JOINT PRESS RELEASE
17 March 2011
The problems
surrounding the moves to uphold the rights of members of
the medical profession - nurses, midwives and assistant
medical
personnel - at the DokII Hospital in Jayapura
have intensified and have
now led to their
criminalisation. Eight nurses have been declared
suspects, five of whom are in police custody
In April
2010, medical personnel sought a meeting with the governor
of
the province of Papua to discuss an improvement in
their rights. On 2
December 2010, they held their first
demonstration demanding payment of
an incentive that
had been promised a year before by the regional
government. On 6 December, the governor issued Decision
125 ordering
that the incentive be paid from January
2010. On 17 December, during a
Christmas celebration at
the hospital, the regional secretary of the
Papuan
province said in his address that the incentive would be
paid.
But all of a sudden, without any consultation, the
governor issued
Instruction 141 on 30 December saying
that the decision to pay the
incentive had been
cancelled.
A number of meetings held with various official
bodies including the
provincial legislative assembly,
the DPRP, failed to secure any
agreement about the
incentive.nor was there any response from the
provincial
administration. On the contrary, the personnel were treated
as criminals. Services as the hospital were badly
affected as many of
the personnel paid visits to their
colleagues who were in custody, as a
sign of
solidarity.
The undersigned NGOs, in a spirit of
solidarity with the medical
personnel at DokII Hospital,
wish to convey the following:
1. We are very concerned
about the failure as yet to reach any solution
to the
problems between the hospital.personnel and the Papuan
provincial
administration. This long drawn out case
shows that the provincial
administration is incapable of
solving the problems in the healthcare
sector, which is
one of the priorities under the special autonomy law.
2.
We are very concerned about the fact that within a period of
one
month, two instructions were issued by the governor
on the matter, one
of which ordered the implementation
of an instruction while the other
cancelled the
instruction, without explaining the reason for this. This
has only highlighted the deficiencies in the system and
the lack of
coordination and lack of understanding about
governance in the province
of Papua.
3. Far from
solving the problem, the criminalisation of eight medical
personnel has worsened the problem and has resulted in
the paralysis of
healthcare services at DokII Jayapura
Hospital .
4. We call on the police in Papua to release
the five medical personnel
in custody and to withdraw
the decision to criminalise them. This would
help
safeguard the neutrality and authority of the police in the
eyes of
the public.
5. We call on the medical
personnel at DokII Hospital to continue to
comply with
their responsibilities towards the community because the
Papuan people are entitled to receive proper medical
attention.
6. The governor should immediately enter into
dialogue with the medical
personnel in order to pay due
attention to their rights, particularly
taking account
of the burdens and risks involved in correcting the
management of DokII Hospital. Such a dialogue would
prove that the
Papuan provincial administration has
acknowledged its responsibility to
provide healthcare
services while enhancing the positive reputation of
the
provincial government in the eyes of the medical profession
throughout the Land of
Papua.
ENDS