Doctors, teachers, taxi drivers go on strike in Spain’s Catalonia
Thousands of workers have walked out on a five-day strike and taken to the streets in Catalonia to demand more resources for the public sector.
Teachers, taxi drivers, and healthcare workers stopped working on Wednesday, and gathered in the capital, Barcelona, to protest in front of the regional parliament.
Barcelona police estimated that only 6,500 teachers and healthcare workers participated in one strike.
After a series of unproductive negotiations with Minister of Education Josep Gonzàlez-Cambray, the unions Ustec, CCOO and UGT decided to go ahead with the stoppages.
Ustec has asked the regional government to invest 6 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) in public education as established by the Education Law of Catalonia. They are also asking that the working conditions of educational professionals be improved.
In another strike, organized by the Metges healthcare union, an estimated 10,000 doctors and nurses staged a protest that began in front of the regional health department.
This is the first such demonstration in Catalonia since 2018.
The healthcare workers are demanding more resources and personnel for the Catalan public health system and between 25 to 28 patient appointments per work shift of 12 minutes each.
Some 25,000 health professionals from health centers and hospitals across the region have been called to strike.
MG