The first of thousands of Cuban doctors on Thursday left Brazil after criticism by Brazilian president-elect Jair Bolsonaro prompted Cuba’s government to sever a cooperation agreement, leaving millions of Brazilians without medical care.
Bolsonaro said the Cuban doctors were being used as “slave labor,” because the Cuban government took 75 percent of their salaries.
He said the program that began in 2013 could only continue if they received full pay and were allowed to bring their families from Cuba.
Photo: EPA-EFE
Bolsonaro, an far-right admirer of US President Donald Trump, was elected last month by Brazilians fed up with rising crime and rampant corruption that reached new highs during almost a decade-and-a-half of leftist governments with close ties to Cuba.
The Cubans practiced mostly in poor and remote areas of Brazil where Brazilian doctors do not want to work. The government is now scrambling to replace them after 8,332 positions were left vacant by the sudden departures of the Cubans.
Cuba has a respected health service and generates major export earnings by sending more than 50,000 health workers to more than 60 countries. Even receiving a fraction of their salaries, the money was good for the doctors by Cuban standards.
As they lined up to check in at the Brasilia airport, many had large mainly 49-inch smart TVs packaged to take home to communist-run Cuba, where such imported sets are very expensive.
“I will be happy to see my children, but sad to leave people without medical care,” said Lume Rodriguez, a general practitioner who spent two years in the interior of Bahia State.
“Our patients came to hug us goodbye,” said Rafael Sosa, 32, from Granma Province in eastern Cuba. “I visited many patients here who had never had a doctor in their home.”
In many Brazilian towns and the outskirts of cities that relied on the Cuban doctors, usually crowded waiting rooms at public health posts were empty this week and notices said appointments had been canceled until further notice.
Adrielly Rodrigues, a pregnant 22-year-old, was on Wednesday turned away when she went for a prenatal scan in Santa Maria, a town near the capital Brasilia.
“We are so worried because we don’t have the money to pay for a private doctor and she is five months pregnant and still needs to be monitored and have tests,” her mother Adriana Rodrigues said.
A national lobby of mayors, the FNP, and the municipal health authorities council CONASEMS said in a statement that 29 million Brazilians could be left without basic healthcare. They urged the government to make it possible for the Cubans to stay.
Bolsonaro, who takes office on Jan. 1 next year, last week said that he would grant asylum to any Cuban who asked for it, escalating tensions with Havana.
Cuban doctors were not qualified and would have to take exams to practice in Brazil, he said.
The Brazilian Ministry of Health next week plans to waive a requirement that Cubans validate their medical diploma in Brazil, so that they can continue working directly contracted by the Brazilian government and not through the Pan-American Health Organization.
It is not clear how many Cubans will want to break with their communist-run government’s doctors-for-export program, especially if they have children in Cuba, since it would be tantamount to defecting.
Brazil plans to fill the medical vacuum with local hires.
In just two days since registration opened, 3.648 Brazilians have been selected to fill the empty posts, a ministry spokesman said, adding that those replacements are mainly in large urban areas.
OUTRAGE: The former strongman was accused of corruption and responsibility for the killings of hundreds of thousands of political opponents during his time in office Indonesia yesterday awarded the title of national hero to late president Suharto, provoking outrage from rights groups who said the move was an attempt to whitewash decades of human rights abuses and corruption that took place during his 32 years in power. Suharto was a US ally during the Cold War who presided over decades of authoritarian rule, during which up to 1 million political opponents were killed, until he was toppled by protests in 1998. He was one of 10 people recognized by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto in a televised ceremony held at the presidential palace in Jakarta to mark National
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr yesterday vowed that those behind bogus flood control projects would be arrested before Christmas, days after deadly back-to-back typhoons left swathes of the country underwater. Scores of construction firm owners, government officials and lawmakers — including Marcos’ cousin congressman — have been accused of pocketing funds for substandard or so-called “ghost” infrastructure projects. The Philippine Department of Finance has estimated the nation’s economy lost up to 118.5 billion pesos (US$2 billion) since 2023 due to corruption in flood control projects. Criminal cases against most of the people implicated are nearly complete, Marcos told reporters. “We don’t file cases for
LANDMARK: After first meeting Trump in Riyadh in May, al-Sharaa’s visit to the White House today would be the first by a Syrian leader since the country’s independence Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa arrived in the US on Saturday for a landmark official visit, his country’s state news agency SANA reported, a day after Washington removed him from a terrorism blacklist. Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted long-time former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad late last year, is due to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House today. It is the first such visit by a Syrian president since the country’s independence in 1946, according to analysts. The interim leader met Trump for the first time in Riyadh during the US president’s regional tour in May. US envoy to Syria Tom Barrack earlier
Ecuadorans are today to vote on whether to allow the return of foreign military bases and the drafting of a new constitution that could give the country’s president more power. Voters are to decide on the presence of foreign military bases, which have been banned on Ecuadoran soil since 2008. A “yes” vote would likely bring the return of the US military to the Manta air base on the Pacific coast — once a hub for US anti-drug operations. Other questions concern ending public funding for political parties, reducing the number of lawmakers and creating an elected body that would