World Medical Association Praised For Human Rights Work
Dr Beko Ransome-Kuti, the former president of the Nigerian Medical
Association, has warmly praised the work of the World Medical Association
in helping to bring about his release from prison in Nigeria earlier
this year.
Speaking publicly about his ordeal for the first time at the
WMA's recent annual General Assembly in Ottawa, Dr Ransome Kuti
said that international organisations like the WMA had a great
role to play both in supporting health professionals in danger
by speaking out forcefully and promptly and by mobilising their
members to do the same.
He said it was no coincidence that in 1995 the military government
in Nigeria held back from proscribing the Nigerian Medical Association,
which had remained the only professional organisation that the
Government had been unable to 'incapacitate'. In April of that
year the WMA president, Professor Priscilla Kincaid-Smith, was
a special guest at the Nigerian Medical Association conference.
"Her timely vigorous protest and condemnation of the action
of the authorities certainly restrained the military junta".
Dr Ransome-Kuti was released from prison in June this year after
serving three years of a 15 year gaol sentence on charges of conspiracy
to overthrow the Nigerian Government.
In his address to the WMA, Dr Ransome-Kuti said: "It is
often the case that governments who show no hesitation in abusing
the independence and integrity of health professionals are the
same who care very little about the health care standards in their
country. It is therefore not surprising that these high government
officials obtain expensive medical treatment for themselves and
their families in foreign and distant lands using the resources
that should have been applied in improving the health facilities
in their own countries in the first place".
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