Egypt

A briefing request and a parliamentary question regarding the reconciliation crisis at clinics

House of Representatives member Dr. Sarah Al-Nahhas requested a briefing and a parliamentary question to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Counselor Dr. Hanafi Jabali, regarding the procedures of some neighborhoods to close and wax clinics that are already licensed until they are reconciled.

 

She directed Dr. Sarah Al-Nahhas requested the briefing and parliamentary question to the Prime Minister, the Minister of Local Development, and the Minister of Health and Population.

The head of the Medical Syndicate, Dr. Osama Abdel-Hay announced that the union sent a letter to the Prime Minister, Dr. Mustafa Madbouly, Speaker of the House of Representatives Counselor Dr. Hanafi Jabali, and Deputy Prime Minister for Human Development and Minister of Health and Population Dr. Khaled Abdel Ghaffar, and the Minister of Local Development, Dr. Manal Awad, which includes a legal memorandum prepared by Professor of Public Law and former President of Cairo University, Dr. Jaber Nassar, regarding the extent to which medical clinics are subject to licenses in accordance with the building law, after the local government agencies in the governorates began to demand that doctors must reconcile and obtain a license to convert these clinics from residential to administrative.

The union explained that the legal memorandum it received The Doctors Syndicate agreed with the Syndicate’s legal position and opinion since the beginning of the crisis, as it affirmed that medical clinics and other medical facilities are not subject in any way to Building Law No. 119 of 2008, nor are they reconciled to it, and that medical clinics, private hospitals, and the like are subject to the Professions Law. Medicine, which is what its legal centers settled on even before the issuance of the Medical Professions Law in 1981.

She explained that the decisions of the governors in this regard violate the law and the constitution, and constitute a usurpation of authority and an assault on private property, and on sound legal conditions that have been established. For decades.

She pointed out that medical clinics are private money owned by their owner and may not be burdened with restrictions that prevent their use. This certainly includes imposing exorbitant fees for each square meter under the pretext of converting the establishment into a professional activity, which is something that is not acceptable. It is based on a reliable legal text, and it clearly violates the provisions of Law No. 51 of 1981 regarding licensing of medical facilities.

It also confirmed that there is no connection between medical clinics and hospitals and Law No. 119 of 2008, as the texts of the law are promulgated and regulated, and the word is not mentioned in it.

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