martes, 7 de mayo de 2013

Brazil in talks to hire 6,000 Cuban doctors

7 May 2013 Last updated at 02:22 GMT



Brazil in talks to hire 6,000 Cuban doctors



Brazil has begun negotiations to hire at least 6,000 Cuban doctors to

work in rural areas, Brazilian Foreign Minister Antonio Patriota says.



Both countries are consulting the Pan American Health Organisztion to

allow Cuban doctors to practise in Brazil.



Most Brazilian doctors are concentrated in the country's bigger cities,

leaving remote areas badly covered.



Cuba has already sent tens of thousands of doctors to work in Venezuela,

which in turn provides Havana with cheap oil.



There was no deadline yet for the doctors' arrival in Brazil, Mr

Patriota told reporters after meeting his Cuban counterpart, Bruno

Rodriguez, in the Cuban capital.



A Brazilian doctors' organisation, the Federal Medical Council, said the

proposal was "irresponsible" because of questions surrounding medical

qualifications. It condemned the step as a "politico-electoral" programme.

'Pharmaceuticals'



The talks with Cuba were initiated by President Dilma Rousseff in

January last year, during her visit to Havana.



At the time, Ms Rousseff also spoke about joint production of medicine,

another topic mentioned by Mr Patriota on Monday.



"Cuba is very proficient in the areas of medicine, pharmaceuticals and

biotechnology and Brazil is considering receiving around 6,000 Cubans

doctors or a little more," said the Brazilian Foreign minister.



Both countries also discussed infrastructure projects in Cuba "such as

the Mariel port, and also the refurbishment of the airports in Havana

and Santiago, which will also be financed by Brazil," Mr Patriota said.



Brazil is expected to loan $176m (£113m) from its development bank BNDES

for work at Cuban airports, Reuters reported.



Cuban authorities say Brazil is its sixth biggest trading partner and

main food supplier.



Bilateral trade between the two countries reached a record $661m last

year, up 6% on 2011.



http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-22429101

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