The staff of the hospital in Montelimar, in the French department of Drome serves 56,000 regional residents. Not anymore, the healthcare staff have gone on an indefinite strike to protest the new rules demanding they take a vaccine against Covid-19 by mid-September or face losing their jobs.

The strike against forced vaccination was announced on Thursday by the CGT-GHPP trade union, and affects some 200 doctors and 1,500 nurses in the south-eastern French city. Hundreds of them gathered outside the hospital on Friday, denouncing lockdowns and vaccine mandates and chanting ‘liberté!’ (freedom).
The French legislature is finalising the proposal that would require all medical professionals in contact with the vulnerable to be fully vaccinated by September 15, or else lose their salaries and even their jobs.
‘We are against mandatory vaccination and vaccine coercion,’ Elsa Ruillere, local union representative, told Sputnik France. ‘There is no choice between tests or vaccination: vaccination is compulsory. No, we don’t agree. We want to have the choice like the rest of the world and we do not want compulsory vaccination.’
Ruillere says her union supports ’free and informed consent’ and is not against vaccination on principle but is against coercion. Some of the medical workers said they are waiting for the French-made Sanofi-GSK vaccine promised for December.
‘We are well aware of the evolution of the virus. We do not take it lightly,’ Ruillere said. However, she and her striking colleagues point out that even with the rise in positive tests for the Delta variant of the coronavirus, there is no rise in hospitalisations.

‘Yes, we turned ‘red’ but that’s in fact due to the positive tests, not deaths or illnesses. In terms of hospitalisations, we are fine at the moment, we did not need to reopen beds, we have far fewer hospitalised people than before and fewer people in intensive care,’ she added.
Another union complaint is the lack of public debate, since France’s National Assembly seems to have simply proceeded on the advice of the state-sponsored and state-dependent High Health Authority (HAS), which called the vaccination mandate justified.

There have been widespread protests in France since mid-July, as the regime of President Emmanuel Macron imposed the vaccination mandate on health workers and introduced a ’health pass‘ requirement to access public venues with more than 50 people in attendance. The pass requirement will extend to cafes, restaurants, and shops starting August 1. Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!


Categories: Uncategorized
















