The
economic crisis has undermined social protection in Spain. The Council of
Europe, which oversees respect for human rights in 47 countries on the
continent, on Wednesday expressed concern over "regressive legislative
developments concerning access to health care by foreigners illegally present
in the country."
The
conclusion is part of a wide-reaching report by the European Committee on
Social Rights that examines whether national laws conform to the European
Social Charter.
The
2013 conclusions, released on Wednesday, found that Spain was one of several
countries that had regressed on social rights compared with earlier periods.
Other states where healthcare, social welfare and occupational safety have been
curtailed included Austria, France, Finland, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic,
Denmark, Lithuania and Latvia.
Spain
scored negatively on six out of 17 points that the committee investigated,
including the decision to deny free healthcare to foreigners living illegally
in the country, a general rule introduced by
the Popular Party government of Mariano Rajoy with certain exceptions (minors,
pregnant women and anyone with an infectious disease).
"The
economic crisis cannot serve as a pretext for a restriction or denial of access
to health care that affects the very substance of the right of access to health
care," the Council of Europe committee argues, noting that states have the
obligation to provide assistance to citizens regardless of their residency
status.
“They
cannot be excluded. Both the central government and the regional authorities
have the obligation to respect this criterium by the Council of Europe,"
said Luis Quesada, president of the European Committee on Social Rights, which
conducts periodic surveys of states' compliance with the Social Charter.
The
countries found to have violated the charter the most were Albania, Georgia,
Moldavia and Ukraine, followed by two EU member states, Romania and Greece.
“Figures have worsened considerably. It's a source of great concern to us.
Social rights must be protected," adds Colm O’Cinneide, head of the 2013
report.
Besides
restrictions on healthcare for undocumented migrants, the committee objected to
other measures implemented by Spain, such as the minimum level of sickness benefit,
which is "manifestly inadequate," or the basic subsidy paid to people
without a minimum income: "In all autonomous communities and
municipalities, except for the Basque country and Navarra communities, the
level of social assistance paid to a single person is manifestly inadequate on
the basis that the minimum assistance that can be obtained falls below the
poverty threshold
No comments:
Post a Comment